Professional Documents
Culture Documents
315
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
PAGE.
I. ENGINEERING AND MECHANICS.—Watchman's Detecter. 5023
Integrating Apparatus. 5023
A Canal Boat Propelled by Air. 5023
Head Linings of Passenger Cars. 5023
Improved Mortar Mixer. 2 figures. 5023
Practical Notes on Plumbing. By J.P. Davies. Figs. 37 to 53. Tinning iron pipes, copper or 5024
brass work, bits, etc.—Spirit brush.—Soldering iron to lead.— Dummies for pipe
bending.—Bends and set-offs.— Bending with water.—Sand bending.—Bending with balls or
bobbins.—Three-ball or lead driving ball and double ball bending.—Bending with windlass
and brass ball.—Hydraulic or cup leather and ball bending.—Bending by splitting, or split
made bends. —Pulling up bends.—Set-offs.—Bad bends.—Bad falls in bends.—Bends made
into traps or retarders. —Bends made with the "snarling dummy."
The Grossenhain Shuttle Driver. 1 figure. 5025
II. ELECTRICITY, MAGNETISM, ETC.—The Electro-Magnetic Apparatus of Dr. Pacinotti. 8 5015
figures. The Pacinotti electro-magnetic machine of 1860.—The Elias electro-motor of 1842.
The Elias Electro-Motor. 5016
Bjerknes's Experiments. 7 figures. 5016
The Arc Electric Light. By Leo Daft. 5018
Hedges' Electric Lamps. 4 figures. 5019
Electric Railway Apparatus at the Paris Electrical Exhibition. 17 figures. Lartigue's switch 5019
controller, elevation and sections.—Position of commutators during the maneuver.—Pedal for
sending warning to railway crossing, with elevation and end and plan views.—Electric
Alarm.—Lartigue's bellows pedal, with plan and sections.—Brunot's Controller. —Guggemos'
correspondence apparatus.—Annunciator apparatus.—Lartigue's controller for water tanks.—
Vérité controller for water tanks.
The Telephonic Halls of the Electrical Exhibition. 1 figure. 5022
It is, of course, obviously impossible in anything approaching a retrospect of the science of magneto-electric
induction or its application to illumination to pass slightly over the names of Oersted, of Ampère, of Davy,
and of Faraday, but, in other respects, their work is too often lost sight of in the splendid modern
developments of their discoveries. Again, there is another group of discoverer-inventors who occupy an
intermediate position between the abstract discoverers above named and the inventors and adapters of still
more recent times. To this group belong the names of Pixii and Saxton, Holmes and Nollet, Wilde, Varley,
Siemens, Wheatstone, and Pacinotti, who was the first to discover a means of constructing a machine capable
of giving a continuous current always in the same direction, and which has since proved itself to be the type of
nearly all the direct current electric machines of the present day, and especially those such as the Gramme and
Brush and De Meritens machines, in which the rotating armature is of annular form; and when it is considered
what a large number of the well known electric generators are founded upon this discovery, it must be a
matter of general gratification that the recent International Jury of the Paris Exhibition of Electricity awarded
to Dr. Antonio Pacinotti one of their highest awards.
The original machine designed by Dr. Pacinotti in the year 1860, and which we illustrate on the present page,
formed one of the most interesting exhibits in the Paris Exhibition, and conferred upon the Italian Section a
very distinctive feature, and we cannot but think that while all were interested in examining it, there must have
been many who could not help being impressed with the fact that it took something away from the originality
of design in several of the machines exhibited in various parts of the building.
This very interesting machine was first illustrated and described by its inventor in the Nuovo Cimento in the
year 1864, under the title "A Description of a Small Electro-Magnetic Machine," and to this description we
are indebted for the information and diagrams contained in this notice, but the perspective view is taken from
the instrument itself in the Paris Exhibition.
In this very interesting historical communication the author commences by describing a new form of
electro-magnet, consisting of an iron ring around which is wound (as in the Gramme machine) a single helix
of insulated copper wire completely covering the ring, and the two ends of the annular helix being soldered
together, an annular magnet is produced, enveloped in an insulated helix forming a closed circuit, the
convolutions of which are all in the same direction. If in such a system any two points of the coil situated at
opposite ends of the same diameter of the ring be connected respectively with the two poles of a voltaic
battery, the electric current having two courses open to it, will divide into two portions traversing the coil
around each half of the ring from one point of contact to the other, and the direction of the current, in each
portion will be such as to magnetize the iron core, so that its magnetic poles will be situated at the points
where the current enters and leaves the helix, and a straight line joining these points may be looked upon as
the magnetic axis of the system. From this construction it is clear that, by varying the position of the points of
contact of the battery wires and the coil, the position of the magnetic axis will be changed accordingly, and
can be made to take up any diametrical position with respect to the ring, of which the two halves (separated by
the diameter joining the points of contact of the battery wires with the coil) may be regarded as made up of
two semicircular horseshoe electro-magnets having their similar poles joined. To this form of instrument the
name "Transversal electro magnet" (Eletro calamita transversale) was given by its inventor, to whom is
undoubtedly due the merit of having been the first to construct an electro-magnet the position of whose poles
The commutator consists of a small boxwood cylinder, carrying around its cylindrical surface two rows of
eight holes, one above the other, in which are fitted sixteen contact pieces of brass which slightly project
above the surface of the wood, the positions of those in the upper circle alternating or "breaking joint" with
those in the lower, and each contact piece is in metallic connection with its corresponding conducting wire,
and, therefore, with the junction of two of the helices on the armature. Against the edge of the commutator are
pressed by means of adjustable levers two small brass contact rollers, k k, which are respectively connected
with the positive and negative poles of the voltaic battery (either through or independent of the coils of a fixed
electro-magnet, to which we shall presently refer), and the magnetic axis of the ring will lie in the same plane
as the line joining the points of contact of the battery and rotating helix, this axis remaining nearly fixed
notwithstanding the rotation of the iron ring in which the magnetism is induced.
The connections of the machine, which are shown in Fig. 3, are made as follows: The positive current,
entering by the attachment screw, h, passes by a wire to the right hand commutator screw, l, to the right-hand
roller, k, through the commutator to the ring, around which it traverses to the left-hand roller, k¹, and screw, l¹,
to the magnet coil, A, and thence through the coil of the magnet, B, to the terminal screw, h, on the right hand
of the figure. This method of coupling up is of very great historical interest, for it is the first instance on
record of the magnet coils and armature of a machine being included in one circuit, giving to it the principle
of construction of a dynamo-electric machine, and antedating in publication, by two years, the interesting
machines of Siemens, Wheatstone, and Varley, and preceding them in construction by a still longer period.
With this apparatus Dr. Pacinotti made the following interesting experiments with the object of determining
the amount of mechanical work produced by the machine (when worked as an electro-magnetic engine), and
the corresponding consumption of the elements of the battery: Attached to the spindle of the machine was a
small pulley, Q Q (Fig. 3), for the purpose of driving, by means of a cord, another pulley on a horizontal
spindle carrying a drum on which was wound a cord carrying a weight, and on the same spindle was also a
brake and brake-wheel, the lever of which was loaded so as just to prevent the weight setting into motion the
whole system, consisting of the two machines, when no current was flowing. In this condition, when the
machine was set in motion by connecting the battery, the mechanical work expended in overcoming the
friction of the brake was equal to that required to raise the weight; and, in order to obtain the total work done,
all that was necessary was to multiply the weight lifted by the distance through which it was raised. The
consumption of the battery was estimated at the same time by interposing in the circuit a sulphate of copper
voltameter, of which the copper plate was weighed before and after the experiment. The following are some
of the results obtained by Dr. Pacinotti in experimenting after the manner just described. With the current
from a battery of four small Bunsen elements, the machine raised a weight of 3.2812 kilos to a height of 8.66
m. (allowing for friction), so that the mechanical work was represented by 28.45 m. During the experiment the
positive plate of the voltameter lost in weight 0.224 gramme, the negative gaining 0.235 gramme, giving an
average of chemical work performed in the voltameter of 0.229 gramme, and multiplying this figure by the
ratio between the equivalent of zinc to that of copper, and by the number of the elements of the battery, the
weight of zinc consumed in the battery was computed at 0.951 gramme, so that to produce one kilogrammeter
of mechanical work 33 milligrammes of zinc would be consumed in the battery. In another experiment, made
with five elements, the consumption of zinc was found to be 36 milligrammes for every kilogrammeter of
mechanical work performed. In recording these experiments, Dr. Pacinotti points out that although these
results do not show any special advantage in his machine over those of other construction, still they are very
encouraging, when it is considered that the apparatus with which the experiments were made were full of
defects of workmanship, the commutator, being eccentric to the axis, causing the contacts between it and the
rollers to be very imperfect and unequal.
In his communication to the Nuovo Cimento, Dr. Pacinotti states that the reasons which induced him to
construct the apparatus on the principle which we have just described, were: (1) That according to this system
the electric current is continuously traversing the coils of the armature, and the machine is kept in motion not
by a series of intermittent impulses succeeding one another with greater or less rapidity, but by a constantly
acting force producing a more uniform effect. (2) The annular form of the revolving armature contributes
(together with the preceding method of continuous magnetization) to give regularity to its motion and at the
same time reduces the loss of motive power, through mechanical shocks and friction, to a minimum. (3) In the
annular system no attempt is made suddenly to magnetize and demagnetize the iron core of the rotating
In the part to which we refer, Dr. Pacinotti states that it occurred to him that the value of the apparatus would
be greatly increased if it could be altered from an electro-magnetic to a magneto-electric machine, so as to
produce a continuous current. Thus, if the electro-magnet, A B (Figs. 3 and 4), be replaced by a permanent
magnet, and the annular armature were made to revolve, the apparatus would become a magneto-electric
generator, which would produce a continuous induced current always in the same direction, and in analyzing
the action of such a machine Dr. Pacinotti observes that, as the position of the magnetic field is fixed, and the
iron armature with its coils rotates within it, the action may be regarded as the same as if the iron ring were
made up of two fixed semicircular horseshoe magnets with their similar poles joined, and the coils were loose
upon it and were caused to rotate over it, and this mode of expressing the phenomenon was exactly what we
adopted when describing the Gramme machine, without having at that time seen what Dr. Pacinotti had
written fifteen years before.
In explanation of the physical phenomena involved in the induction of the electric currents in the armature
when the machine is in action as a generator, Dr. Pacinotti makes the following remarks: Let us trace the
action of one of the coils in the various positions that it can assume in one complete revolution; starting from
the position marked N, Fig. 2, and moving toward S, an electric current will be developed in it in one
direction while moving through the portion of the circle, N a, and after passing the point, a, and while passing
through the arc, a S, the induced current will be in the opposite direction, which direction will be maintained
until the point, b, is reached, after which the currents will be in the same direction as between N and a; and as
all the coils are connected together, all the currents in a given direction will unite and give the combined
current a direction indicated by the arrows in Fig. 2, and in order to collect it (so as to transmit it into the
external circuit), the most eminent position for the collectors will be at points on the commutator at opposite
ends of a diameter which is perpendicular to the magnetic axis of the magnetic field. With reference to Fig. 2,
we imagine either that the two arrows to the right of the figure are incorrectly placed by the engraver, or that
Dr. Pacinotti intended this diagram to express the direction of the current throughout the whole circuit, as if it
started from a, and after traversing the external circuit entered again at b, thus completing the whole cycle
made up of the external and internal circuits.
Dr. Pacinotti calls attention to the fact that the direction of the current generated by the machine is reversed by
a reversal of the direction of rotation, as well as by a shifting of the position of the collectors from one side to
the other of their neutral point, and concludes his most interesting communication by describing experiments
made with it in order to convert it into a magneto-electric machine. "I brought," he says, "near to the coiled
armature the opposite poles of two permanent magnets, and I also excited by the current from a battery the
fixed electro-magnets (see Figs. 3 and 4), and by mechanical means I rotated the annular armature on its axis.
By both methods I obtained an induced electric current, which was continuous and always in the same
direction, and which, as was indicated by a galvanometer, proved to be of considerable intensity, although it
had traversed the sulphate of copper voltameter which was included in the circuit."
All these statements are matters of everyday familiarity at the present day, but it must be remembered that
they are records of experiments made twenty years ago, and as such they entitle their author to a very
distinguished place among the pioneers of electric science, and it is somewhat remarkable that they did not
lead him straight to the discovery of the "action and reaction" principle of dynamo-electric magnetic induction
to which he approached so closely, and it is also a curious fact that so suggestive and remarkable a paper
should have been written and published as far back as 1864, and that it should not have produced sooner than
it did a revolution in electric science.—Engineering.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS.
As a general thing, too much trust should not be placed in words. In the first place, it frequently happens that
their sense is not well defined, or that they are not understood exactly in the same way by everybody, and this
leads to sad misunderstandings. But even in case they are precise, and are received everywhere under a single
acceptation, there still remains one danger, and that is that of passing from the word to the idea, and of being
led to believe that, because there is a word, there is a real thing designated by this word.
Let us take, for example, the word electricity. If we understand by this term the common law which embraces
a certain category of phenomena, it expresses a clear and useful idea; but as for its existence, it is not
permitted to believe a priori that there is a distinct agent called electricity which is the efficient cause of the
phenomena. We ought never, says the old rule of philosophy, to admit entities without an absolute necessity.
The march of science has always consisted in gradually eliminating these provisory conceptions and in
reducing the number of causes. This fact is visible without going back to the ages of ignorance, when every
new phenomenon brought with it the conception of a special being which caused it and directed it. In later
ages they had spirits in which there was everything: volatile liquids, gases, and theoretical conceptions, such
as phlogiston. At the end of the last century, and at the beginning of our own, ideas being more rational, the
notion of the "fluid" had been admitted, a mysterious and still vague enough category (but yet an already
somewhat definite one) in which were ranged the unknown and ungraspable causes of caloric, luminous,
electric, etc., phenomena. Gradually, the "fluid" has vanished, and we are left (or rather, we were a short time
ago) at the notion of forces—a precise and mathematically graspable notion, but yet an essentially
mysterious one. We see this conception gradually disappearing to leave finally only the elementary ideas of
matter and motion—ideas, perhaps, which are not much clearer philosophically than the others,
particularly that of matter taken per se, but which, at least, are necessary, since all the others supposed them.
Among those notions that study and time are reducing to other and simpler ones, that of electricity should be
admitted; for it presents itself more and more as one of the peculiar cases of the general motion of matter. It
will be to the eternal honor of Fresnel for having introduced into science and mathematically constituted the
theory of undulations (already proposed before him, however), thus giving the first example of the notion of
motion substituted for that of force. Since the principle of the conservation of energy has taken the eminent
place in science that it now occupies, and we have seen a continual transformation of one series of phenomena
into another, the mind is at once directed to the aspect of a new fact toward an explanation of this kind. Still, it
is certain that these hypotheses are difficult of justification; for those motions that are at present named
molecular, and that we cannot help presuming to be at the base of all actions, are per se ungraspable and can
only be demonstrated by the coincidence of a large number of results. There is, however, another means of
rendering them probable, and that is by employing analogy. If, by vibrations which are directly ascertainable,
we can reproduce the effects of electricity, there will be good reason for admitting that the latter is nothing
else than a system of vibration differing only, perhaps, in special qualities, such as dimensions, direction,
rapidity, etc.
Such is the result that is attained by the very curious experiments that are due to Mr. Bjerknes. These
constitute an ensemble of very striking results, which are perfectly concordant and exhibit very close
analogies with electrical effects, as we shall presently see.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS. 9
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Fig. 1.
They are based on the presence of bodies set in vibration in a liquid. The vibrations produced by Mr. Bjerknes
are of two kinds—pulsations and oscillations. The former of these are obtained by the aid of small
drums with flexible ends, as shown to the left in Fig. 1. A small pump chamber or cylinder is, by means of a
tube, put in communication with one of these closed drums in which the rapid motion of a piston alternately
sucks in and expels the air. The two flexible ends are successively thrust outward and attracted toward the
center. In an apparatus of this kind the two ends repulse and attract the liquid at the same time. Their motions
are of the same phase; if it were desired that one should repulse while the other was attracting, it would be
necessary to place two drums back to back, separated by a stiff partition, and put them in connection with two
distinct pump chambers whose movements were so arranged that one should be forcing in while the other was
exhausting. A system of this nature is shown to the right in Fig. 1.
The vibrations are obtained by the aid of small metal spheres fixed in tubular supports by movable levers to
which are communicated the motions of compression and dilatation of the air in the pump chamber. They
oscillate in a plane whose direction may be varied according to the arrangement of the sphere, as seen in the
two apparatus of this kind shown in Fig. 1. Fig. 2 will give an idea of the general arrangement. The two
pistons of the air-pumps are connected to cranks that may be fixed in such a way as to regulate the phases as
may be desired, either in coincidence or opposition. The entire affair is put in motion by a wheel and cord
permitting of rapid vibrations being obtained. The air is let into the apparatus by rubber tubing without
interfering with their motions.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS. 10
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Fig. 2.
We may now enter into the details of the experiments:
The first is represented in Fig. 2. In a basin of water there is placed a small frame carrying a drum fixed on an
axle and capable of revolving. It also communicates with one of the air cylinders. The operator holds in his
hand a second drum which communicates with the other cylinder. The pistons are adjusted in such a way that
they shall move parallel with each other; then the ends of the drums inflate and collapse at the same time; the
motions are of the same phase; but if the drums are brought near each other a very marked attraction occurs,
the revolving drum follows the other. If the cranks are so adjusted that the pistons move in an opposite
direction, the phases are discordant—there is a repulsion, and the movable drum moves away from the
other. The effect, then, is analogous to that of two magnets, with about this difference, that here it is the like
phases that attract and the different phases that repel each other, while in magnets like poles repel and unlike
poles attract each other.
It is necessary to remark that it is indifferent which face of the drum is presented, since both possess the same
phase. The drum behaves, then, like an insulated pole of a magnet, or, better, like a magnet having in its
middle a succeeding point. In order to have two poles a double drum must be employed. The experiment then
becomes more complicated; for it is necessary to have two pump chambers with opposite phases for this drum
alone, and one or two others for the revolving drum. The effects, as we shall see, are more easily shown with
the vibrating spheres.
This form has the advantage that the vibrating body exhibits the two phases at the same time; relatively to the
liquid, one of its ends advances while the other recedes. Thus with a vibrating sphere presented to the movable
drum, there may be obtained repulsion or attraction, according as the side which is approached is concordant
or discordant with the end of the drum that it faces.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS. 11
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Fig. 3.
With the arrangement shown in Fig. 3 there may be performed an interesting series of experiments. The two
spheres supported by the frame are set in simultaneous vibration, and the frame, moreover, is free to revolve
about its axis. The effect is analogous to that which would be produced by two short magnets carried by the
same revolving support; on presenting the vibrating sphere to the extremities the whole affair is attracted or
repulsed, according to its phase and according to the point at which it is presented; on replacing the transverse
support by a single sphere (as indicated in the figure by a dotted line) we obtain the analogue of a short
magnet carried on a pivot like a small compass needle. This sphere follows the pole of a vibrating sphere
which is presented to it, as the pole of a magnet would do, with this difference always, that in the magnet, like
poles repel, while in oscillating bodies like phases attract.
In all the preceding experiments the bodies brought in presence were both in motion and the phenomena were
analogous to those of permanent magnetism. We may also reproduce those which result from magnetism by
induction. For this purpose we employ small balls of different materials suspended from floats, as shown in
Fig. 4 (a, b, c). Let us, for example, take the body, b, which is a small metal sphere, and present to it either a
drum which is caused to pulsate, on an oscillating sphere, and it will be attracted, thus representing the action
of a magnet upon a bit of soft iron. A curious experiment may serve to indicate the transition between this
new series and the preceding. If we present to each other two drums of opposite phases, but so arranged that
one of them vibrates faster than the other, we shall find, on carefully bringing them together, that the repulsion
which manifested itself at first is changing to attraction. On approaching each other the drum having the
quicker motion finally has upon the other, the same action as if the latter were immovable; and the effect is
analogous to that which takes place between a strong and weak magnet presented by their like poles.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS. 12
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Fig. 4.
By continuing these experiments we arrive at a very important point. Instead of the body, b (Fig. 4), let us take
c. As the figure shows, this is a sphere lighter than water, kept in the liquid by a weight. If we present to it the
vibrating body, it will be repelled, and we shall obtain the results known by the name of diamagnetism. This
curious experiment renders evident the influence of media. As well known, Faraday attributed such effects to
the action of the air; and he thought that magnetic motions always resulted from a difference between the
attraction exerted by the magnet upon the body under experiment, and the attraction exerted by the air. If the
body is more sensitive than the air, there is direct magnetism, but if it is less so, there is diamagnetism. Water
between the bodies, in the Bjerknes experiments, plays the same role; it is this which, by its vibration,
transmits the motions and determines the phases in the suspended body. If the body is heavier than water its
motion is less than that of the liquid, and, consequently, relatively to the vibrating body, it is of like phase;
and if it is lighter, the contrary takes place, and the phases are in discordance. These effects may be very well
verified by the aid of the little apparatus shown in Fig. 5, and which carries two bars, one of them lighter and
the other heavier than water. On presenting to them the vibrating body, one presents its extremity and takes an
axial direction, while the other arranges itself crosswise and takes the equatorial direction. These experiments
may be varied in different ways that it is scarcely necessary to dwell upon in this place, as they may be seen at
the Electrical Exhibition.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS. 13
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Fig. 5.
Very curious effects are also obtained with the arrangement shown in Fig. 6. Between the two drums there is
introduced a body sustained by a float such as represented at a, Fig. 4. Various results may, then, be obtained
according to the combinations adopted. Let us suppose that the phases are alike, and that the interposed body
is heavier than water; in this case it is repelled as far as the circumference of the drums, at which point it
stops. If the phases are different, the influenced body behaves in the opposite manner and stops at the center.
If the body is lighter than water the effects are naturally changed. Placed between two like phases, it is
attracted within a certain radius and repelled when it is placed further off; if the phases are unlike, it is always
repelled. We may easily assure ourselves that these effects are analogous to those which are produced on
bodies placed between the poles of wide and powerful magnets. It is useless to repeat that the analogies are
always inverse.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS. 14
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Fig. 6.
Mr. Bjerknes has carried the examination of these phenomena still further in studying experimentally the
actions that occur in the depths of the liquid; and for this purpose he has made use of the arrangement shown
in Fig. 7. By the side of the vibrating body there is placed a light body mounted on a very flexible spring. This
assumes the motion of that portion of the fluid in which it is immersed, and, by the aid of a small pencil, its
direction is inscribed upon a plate located above it. By placing this registering apparatus in different directions
the entire liquid may be explored. We find by this means figures that are perfectly identical with magnetic
phantoms. All the circumstances connected with these can be reproduced, the vibrating sphere giving the
phantom of a magnet with its two poles. We may even exhibit the mutual action of two magnets. The figures
show with remarkable distinctness—much more distinct, perhaps, than those that are obtained by true
magnets.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS. 15
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Fig. 7.
However, it must not be thought that these so interesting facts are the result of groping in the dark and the
outcome of some fortunate experiment; for they have, on the contrary, been foreseen and predetermined. Mr.
Bjerknes is especially a mathematician, and it was a study, through calculation, of the vibratory motion of a
body or system of bodies in a medium that led him to the results that he afterwards materialized.
After the production, by Mr. Lejeune, of his solutions, Mr. Bjerknes in 1865 entered upon a complete study of
the subject, and recognized the fact that the result of such motions was the production of regular mechanical
actions. He calculated the directions of these, and, along about 1875, perceived the possibility of reproducing
the effects of permanent magnetism. More recently, in 1879, he saw that magnetism by derivation might
likewise be explained by those hypotheses, and figured by actions of this kind. It was not till then that he
performed the experiments, and submitted a body to the results of calculation.
The same process has led him to the conclusion that the action of currents might be represented in the same
manner; only, instead of bodies in vibration, it would require bodies in alternating rotation. The effects are
much more difficult to ascertain, since it is necessary to employ viscid liquids.
Meanwhile, the experiments have been performed. Up to the present time attractions and repulsions have not
been shown, and I do not know whether Mr. Bjerknes has obtained them. But, by the process pointed out, the
lines of action (electric phantoms, if I may so express myself) have been traced, and they are very curious. By
supposing the current perpendicular to the plate, and in the presence of the pole of a magnet, the influences
produced around it are very well seen, and the figures are very striking, especially in the case of two currents.
Mr. Bjerknes does not appear as yet to have obtained from these experiments all that he expects from them.
And yet, such as they are, they have already led him to important conclusions. Thus, calculation, confirmed by
application, has led him to renounce the formula proposed by Ampère and to adopt that of Regnard as
modified by Clausius. Is he right? This is what more prolonged experimentation will allow to be seen.
BJERKNES'S EXPERIMENTS. 16
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
These researches, however, are beset with difficulties of a special nature, and the use of viscid liquids is a
subject for discussion. Mr. Bjerknes desired to employ them for reproducing the effects that he had obtained
from water, but he found that the lines of force were no longer the same, and that the phenomena were
modified. It is necessary, then, to hold as much as possible to liquids that are perfect. The experimenter is at
present endeavoring to use these liquids by employing cylinders having a fluted surface; but it is clear that
this, too, is not without its difficulties.
This series of experiments offers a rare example of the verification of algebraic calculation by direct
demonstration. In general, we may employ geometry, which gives a graphic representation of calculation and
furnishes a valuable control. Sometimes we have practical application, which is a very important verification
in some respects, but only approximate in others. But it is rare that we employ, as Mr. Bjerknes has done, a
material, direct, and immediate translation, which, while it brings the results into singular prominence, permits
of comparing them with known facts and of generalizing the views upon which they are based.
Hypotheses as to the nature of electricity being as yet only tolerably well established, we should neglect
nothing that may contribute to give them a solid basis. Assuming that electricity is a vibratory motion (and
probably there is no doubt about it), yet the fact is not so well established with regard to it as it is to that of
light. Every proof that comes to support this idea is welcome, and especially so when it is not derived from a
kind of accident, but is furnished by a calculated and mathematical combination. Viewed from this double
standpoint, the experiments of Mr. Bjerknes are very remarkable, and, I may add, they are very curious to
behold, and I recommend all visitors to the Exhibition to examine them.—Frank Geraldy, in La
Lumiere Electrique.
By Leo Daft.
I shall experience one difficulty in addressing you this evening, which is, that although I do not wish to take
up your time with purely elementary matter, I wish to make the subject clear to those who may not be familiar
with its earlier struggles.
If we begin at the beginning we have to go back to the time when Faraday made the discovery that light could
be produced by the separation of two carbon rods conducting a current of considerable tension. That is the
historical point when electric lighting first loomed up as a giant possibility of the near future. This occurred
about the year 1846. In some experiments he found that although the circuit could not be interrupted by any
considerable interval when metallic terminals were used without breaking the current, when carbon was
substituted the interval could be largely increased, and a light of dazzling brilliancy appeared between the
points.
This remarkable effect appears to be produced by the rarefaction of the air, due to the great heat evolved by
the combustion of the carbon, and also to the passage of incandescent particles of carbon from pole to pole,
thus reducing the resistance, otherwise too great for the current tension.
That was the beginning of electric lighting; and perhaps it will be well to bridge the long and comparatively
uninteresting interval which elapsed between this discovery and the equally important one which alone gave it
commercial value—I refer to the production of suitable currents by mechanical means. That is to say,
the substitution of energy obtained from coal in the form of steam power reduced the cost to a fraction of what
it necessarily was when the galvanic elements were used. Here is the point; the cost of zinc today is something
over fifty times that of coal, while its energy as a vitalizing agent is only about five times greater, leaving a
very large margin in favor of the "black diamonds." This is not the only advantage, for the resulting impulse
The machines adopted were of the magneto variety, and many ingenious machines of this class were operated
with more or less success, being, however, quickly abandoned upon the introduction of the dynamo-machine,
which gave currents of much greater electromotive force from the same amount of material, the advantage
being chiefly due to the large increase of magnetic intensity in the field magnets. At this period lights of
enormous power were produced with ease and by the use of costly lamps. With complicated mechanism a new
era in artificial illumination seemed close at hand, but a grave difficulty stood in the way—namely, the
proper distribution or subdivision of the light. It was quickly found that the electric difficulty of subdividing
the light, added to the great cost of the lamps then made, was an apparently insurmountable obstacle to its
general adoption, and the electric light was gradually taking its place as a brilliant scientific toy, when the
world was startled by the introduction of the Jablochkoff candle, which may fairly claim to have given a
greater impetus to the new light than any previous invention, a stimulus without which it is even probable that
electric lighting might have slumbered for another decade.
The Jablochkoff candle embodies a very beautiful philosophical principle, and though its promises have not
been fulfilled in general practice, we must not forget that we owe it much for arousing scientific men from a
dangerous lethargy.
Up to this time the light had always been produced by approximation of carbon rods with their axes in the
same plane; but the Jablochkoff candle consisted of like rods arranged parallel to each other and about
one-eighth of an inch apart, the intervening space being filled with plaster of Paris, and the interval at the top
bridged by a conducting medium. The object of the plaster, which is a fairly good insulating material at
ordinary temperatures, is to prevent the passage of the current except at the top, where the conducting material
just referred to assisted the formation of the arc at that point, and the resulting intense heat maintained the
plaster in a moderately conducting state until the whole carbon was consumed. Here, then, was literally an
electric "candle," which could be operated without the costly and unsteady lamps, and fortunately its
birthplace was Paris—then the center of philosophical research; from that period the future of electric
lighting was assured.
When we reflect that owing to the greater disruptive energy of the positive terminal, the carbon so connected
to an ordinary dynamo machine is consumed very much faster than the negative—sometimes in the
ratio of 3 to 1—it will be clear that some other means of consuming the Jablochkoff candle had to be
used, since the arc would cease to exist in a very short time by reason of the unequal consumption of the
carbons, and the subsequent increase of the intervening space beyond the limit of the current tension.
This difficulty M. Gramme overcame with characteristic ingenuity by adding to the ordinary system a
"distributer" capable of delivering plus and minus currents alternately, thus equalizing the consumption,
besides being able to supply a large number of candles on the multiple circuit system, each circuit supporting
four or five lamps. Thus it will be seen that a result was attained which at least gave such men as Siemens,
Gramme, and their peers, if such there be, confidence in the future and a courage which quickly placed the
new science safely beyond the limits of the laboratory. I will not occupy your time by stating the apparent
reasons why the Jablochkoff candle has not fully sustained its brilliant promise—it will, perhaps, be
sufficient to state that it is now superseded practically, though it must always occupy an honorable place in
scientific annals.
Let us now for a few moments consider what the electric light really accomplished at about this period, I mean
from an economical standpoint. It appears from some data furnished by an engineer commissioned by the
French Government that the machines were then capable of maintaining a light equal to from 220 to 450
By Leo Daft. 18
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
candles, measured by comparison with the Carcel burner, per horse power absorbed—a very good
showing considering the youth of the discovery, but presenting rather a gloomy aspect when we consider that
according to Joule's mechanical equivalent of heat, which is 772 foot pounds, or the power required to raise
one pound of water one degree—and for lack of anything better, we are obliged to accept that at this
moment—the whole force contained in one pound of coal would maintain a light equal to 13,000
candles for one hour! That is the ultimate force, and what we are now able to accomplish is but a small
fraction of this amount.
Unfortunately we are but common mortals, and cannot, like Mr. Keely, lightly throw off the trammels of
natural law; we must, therefore, endeavor to close this gap by patient study and experiment.
The limited time at my disposal, and a keen consideration for your feelings, will not permit me to follow the
long series of struggles between mind and matter immediately following Jablochkoff's brilliant invention;
suffice it to say, that the few years just passed have yielded beyond comparison the most marvelous results in
the scientific history of the world, and it will be superfluous to remind you that a great part of this has
undoubtedly been due to the researches made in an effort to reduce electric lighting to a commercial basis. To
say that this has been fully accomplished is but to repeat a well known fact; and in proof of this I quote a high
scientific authority by stating that a result so high as 4,000 candles evolved for 40,000 foot-pounds absorbed
has recently been obtained—an efficiency six or seven times greater than the record of six years ago. In
accepting this statement we must not lose sight of the extreme probability that such effects were evolved
under conditions rarely if ever found in common practice. Of course, I now refer to the arc system. The
volume of light so generated is incomparably greater than by any other known method, though in subdivision
the limit is sooner reached.
Mr. Hawkesworth—Let me ask you a question, please. Supposing that it required a one-horse power to
produce an arc light of, say, 2,000 candles, would it be possible to produce ten arc lights of 200 candles each?
Mr. Daft—No, sir; I will tell you why. It would, if no other element than the simple resistance of the
arcs opposed the passage of a current; then a machine that would produce an inch arc in one light, if placed on
a circuit of sixteen lamps would give to each an arc one-sixteenth of an inch long naturally; but another
difficulty here presents itself in the shape of a resisting impulse of considerable electromotive force in the
opposite direction, apparently caused by the intense polarity of the two terminals. The resistance of the arc
itself varies much according to the volume of current used being usually small with a large quantity of current,
and greater with a current of tension; but this opposing element is always found, and appears to be the only
real obstacle in the way of infinite subdivision.
Almost every objection which human ingenuity could suggest has been urged against lighting by electricity,
but fortunately electricians have been able in most cases either to meet the difficulty or prove it groundless.
In this connection I am led to speak of the common idea that electric light is injurious to the eyes, first,
because of its unsteady character, and secondly, by reason of the great excess of the more refrangible rays.
Both objections undoubtedly hold good where the alleged causes exist; but we can now show you a light
which is certainly as steady as the ordinary gaslight—indeed more steady in an apartment where even
feeble currents of air circulate; and I am sure you will readily acknowledge that the latter objection is disposed
of when I assure you that our light presents the only example with which I am acquainted of an exact artificial
reproduction of the solar light, as shown by decomposition. The two spectra, placed side by side, show in the
most conclusive manner the identity in composition of our light with that of the sun.
The remarkable coolness of the electric light, as compared with its volume by gas, is also due in a great
measure to the conspicuous absence of that large excess of less refrangible, or heat-radiating principle, which
distinguishes almost equally all other modes of artificial illumination. After the foregoing statement it may
By Leo Daft. 19
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
seem a paradox to claim that the electric arc develops the greatest heat with which we have yet had to deal,
but this is so; and the heat has an intensity quite beyond the reach of accurate measurement by any instrument
now known—it has been variously estimated anywhere between 5,000° and 50,000° F. It is sufficient
for our present purpose to know that the most refractory substances quickly disappear when brought under its
influence—even the imperial diamond must succumb in a short time. In order to reconcile this fact with
its coolness as an illuminating agent, we have to take into consideration the extreme smallness of the point
from which the light radiates in the electric arc. A light having the power of many thousand candles will
expose but a fraction of the surface for heat radiation which is shown by one gas-jet, and, as I have
endeavored to explain, these rays contain very much less of the heating principle than those from gas or other
artificial light.
The purity of electric light has another important aspect, which can scarcely be
overestimated—namely, the facility with which all the most delicate shades of color can be
distinguished. I understand from persons better skilled than myself in such matters that this can be done
almost as readily by electric as by day light, and I have little doubt that the slight difference in this respect will
entirely disappear when people become somewhat more familiar with the different conditions—the
effect of such shades viewed by electric light being more like that with comparatively feeble direct sunlight
than the subdued daylight usually prevailing in stores and warehouses.
Again, it has frequently been urged that persons working by electric light have thus induced inflammation of
the eyes. No doubt this is so with light containing the highly refrangible rays in excess; but it is difficult to see
how such an effect can occur with light composed as is the light with which the eyes are constructed to
operate in perfect harmony.
As you are aware, there are other methods of obtaining light by electric energy, and in order to make a fair
comparison of one which has lately attracted a great deal of attention and capital, I will relate to you the result
of observations made during a recent visit to the office of an eminent electrician. The light was that known as
incandescent—a filament of carbon raised to a light-emitting heat in vacuo. The exclusion of the air is
necessary to prevent the otherwise rapid destruction of the carbon by combination with oxygen. At the time of
my visit there were 62 lamps in circuit. According to their statement each lamp was of 16-candle
power—I accept their statement as correct; this will give us an aggregate of 992 candles. The generator
was vitalized by an engine rated by the attendants in charge at 6-horse power. I found that it was a 5×7
cylinder, working with very little expansion 430 revolutions per minute, with 90 pounds of live steam, in a
boiler not 15 feet from the engine. I have every reason to believe that the steam was delivered at the cylinder
with an almost inappreciable loss on 90 pounds. Under those conditions I think it is perfectly fair to assume
(you have the data, so that you can calculate it afterwards) that 750,000 foot pounds were consumed in
producing those 60 lights, aggregating 992 candles. In the kind of engine they had, 750,000 foot pounds
requires a consumption of about 100 pounds of coal per hour. It was an ordinary high speed engine. That
750,000 foot pounds, I assume, required 100 pounds of coal. That is the only weak point in my data; I do not
know that to be true; but I never saw an engine of that form yet capable of delivering 1-horse power with less
consumption than four to five pounds of coal per horse power per hour. I want to be as fair as I can in the
matter. I wish to compare this, as they have taken particular pains to compare it, with gas, at the present cost
of gas.
The hundred pounds of coal will produce 400 feet of gas; 400 feet of gas will evolve the effect of 1,500
candles. So you see the position we are in. In consuming that coal directly by destructive distillation you can
produce 1,500 candles light; by converting it into power, and then again into light by incandescence, you
produce 992! Expressing this in other words, we may say that in producing the light from coal by the
incandescent system you lose one-third of the power as compared with gas, by actually converting the coal
into gas, and delivering it in the ordinary manner. Those are facts. It has been suggested to me that I am too
liberal in my estimate of coal consumed—that those engines consume more than four or five pounds
By Leo Daft. 20
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
per horse power per hour; but I prefer to give them the benefit of the doubt.
Mr. Rothschild—If I understood you correctly, this electric light costs more than gas?
Mr. Daft—Must do by this system. You cannot do better, so far as our philosophy goes. But this whole
system of illumination, as now practiced is a financial fallacy.
Mr. Daft—The same amount of energy converted into light by our arc system will produce 30,000
candles. We are perfectly willing to demonstrate that at any time. I am free to admit that the minute
subdivision obtained by the Edisonian, Swan, or Fox system—they do not differ materially—is a
great desideratum; but this cannot bridge the financial gulf.
Mr. Daft—Certainly; and in so doing I prefer to give our results as actually occurring in everyday
work; and in this connection let me remind you that in no branch of physics are the purely experimental
effects so well calculated to deceive, if not fairly conditioned. As we have seen, it is claimed on excellent
authority that the equivalent of 4,000 candles appeared in an arc by expending 40,000 foot pounds of energy
at the generator, but with everyday conditions it is at present idle to expect such efficiency. Commercially we
can give by our own system 3,000 candles for 40,000 foot pounds absorbed; this may be done for an indefinite
length of time and leave nothing to be desired on the score of steadiness. Unfortunately there is no unit of
photometric measurement generally recognized in this country, each electrician having so far adopted one to
suit his own convenience; but in making the foregoing statement I wish it to be understood that our efficiency
would appear still greater if measured by some of the methods now employed. For our own satisfaction we
have endeavored to be at least approximately accurate, at the same time wishing to avoid the affectation of
extreme precision, such, for example, as adding twenty or thirty candles to measurements of so many
thousands, and we are satisfied that the most critical expert tests will prove our claim to be within the mark.
The limit of subdivision is only reached when the difficulty of further increasing the electromotive force of
the machines, involving great care in insulation and a host of other troubles arising, so to speak, at very high
pressure, is balanced by the objections to working in multiple arc; this appears to occur now at something
below 40 lights, but will in all probability be greatly extended within a short time. The machines are so
constructed that the local currents, usually productive of dangerous heating, are turned to useful account, so
that the point where radiation exceeds production is soon reached, and provided the machines are not speeded
beyond the proper limit, they may be run continuously without the slightest indication of lost vitality. I need
scarcely remind you that this is a most important feature, and by no means a common one.
The lamps used in our system I believe to be the simplest known form of regulator; indeed it seems scarcely
possible that anything less complicated could perform the necessary work; as a matter of fact we may
confidently assert that it cannot be made less liable to derangement. It has frequently been placed on circuit by
persons totally inexperienced in such matters, and still has yielded results which we are quite willing to quote
at any time.
I will not now trespass on your patience further than will enable me to state that experiments now in hand
indicate conclusively that domestic electric lighting of the immediate future will be accomplished in a manner
more beautiful and wondrous than was ever shadowed in an Arabian Night's dream. I hesitate somewhat to
make these vague allusions, since so many wild promises, for which I am not responsible, remain unfulfilled,
but the time is surely near at hand when a single touch will illuminate our homes with a light which will
combine all the elements of beauty, steadiness, softness, and absolute safety, to a degree as yet undreamed of.
I do not ask you to accept this without question, but only to remember that within the last decade wires have
By Leo Daft. 21
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
been taught to convey not only articulate sounds, but the individual voices you know amidst a thousand, and
even light and heat have each been made the medium of communicating our thoughts to distant places!
Not the least remarkable phenomenon in this connection is the intellectual condition of the people who have
welcomed these marvelous achievements and allowed them to enter into their everyday life, thus removing the
greatest barriers of the past and paving the way for that philosophical millennium inevitably awaiting those
who may be fortunate enough to survive the next decade.
[1]
FIG. 1
FIG. 2
Figs. 3 and 4.
Fig. 2 represents a modified form of Mr. Hedges' lamp designed for installation when it is desirable to burn a
number of lamps in series. In this arrangement the carbons are separated by the attractive influence of a
solenoid upon an iron plunger, to which is attached (by a non-magnetic connection) the armature of an
electro-magnet, the coils (which are of fine wire) forming a shunt circuit between the two terminals of the
lamp, and so disposed with respect to the armature as to influence it in an opposite direction to that of the
solenoid. When the circuit of the lamp is completed with the electric generator the carbons are drawn apart by
the action of the solenoid on the plunger, and the distance to which they are separated is determined by the
difference of attractive force exercised upon the armature by the solenoid and the magnet; but as the latter
forms a short circuit to that of the arc, it follows that should the resistance of the arc circuit increase either
through the arc becoming too long or through imperfection in the carbons or contacts, a greater percentage of
current will flow through the magnet coils, and the arc will be shortened, thereby reducing its resistance and
regulating it to the strength of the current. In other words, the distance between the carbons, that is to say, the
length of the arc, is determined by the position of the armature of the electro-magnet between its magnets and
the solenoid, which position is in its turn determined by the difference between the strength of current passing
through the coil of the solenoid and that of the magnet.
Mr. Killingworth Hedges exhibits also a third form of his lamp, in most respects similar to the lamp figured in
Fig. 1, but in which the ends of the two carbons rest against the side of a small cylinder of fireclay or other
refractory material, which is mounted on a horizontal axis and can be rotated thereon by a worm and
worm-wheel actuated by an endless cord passing over a grooved pulley. In the lamp one of the carbon-holders
is rigidly fixed to the framing of the apparatus, and the other is mounted on a point so as to enable the length
of the arc playing over the clay cylinder to be regulated by the action of an electro-magnet attracting an
armature in opposition to the tension of an adjustable spring.
In the same exhibit will be found specimens of Mr. Hedges' two-way switches, which have been designed to
reduce the tendency to sparking and consequent destruction which so often accompanies the action of
switches of the ordinary form. The essential characteristic of this switch, which we illustrate in elevation in
Fig. 3 and in plan in Fig. 4, lies first in the circular form of contact-piece shown in Fig. 4, and next in the fact
that the space between the two fixed contact-pieces is filled up with a block composed of compressed
asbestos, the surface of which is flush with the upper surfaces of the two contact-pieces. The circular
contact-piece attached to the switch lever can be turned round so as to present a fresh surface when that which
has been in use shows indications of being worn, and a good firm contact with the fixed contact-pieces is
insured by the presence of a spiral spring shown in the upper figure, and which, owing to an error in
engraving, appears more like a screw than a spring. In order to prevent bad connection through dust or other
impurities collecting within the joint, the electrical connection between the fulcrum of the switch lever and the
circular contact-piece is made through the bent spring shown edgeways in Fig. 3.—Engineering.
(1.) A mercurial commutator, O, which is fixed on a lever, B, connected with a piece, A, which is applied
against the external surface of the web of the main rails, opposite the extremity of the switch plates;
(2.) A bar, C, which traverses the web of the rail and projects on the opposite side, and which carries a nut, D,
against which the switch plate abuts;
(3.) An electrical alarm and a pile, located near the switch lever. As long as one of the two plates of the switch
is applied against the rail, one of the two commutators is inclined and no current passes. A space of one
millimeter is sufficient to bring the commutator to a horizontal position and to cause the electric alarm to ring
continuously. If the apparatus gets out of order, it is known at once; for if the alarm does not work during the
maneuver of the switch, the tender will be warned that the electric communications are interrupted, and that
he must consequently at once make known the position of his switch until the necessary repairs have been
made.
Pedals for Transmitting Signals to Crossings.—On railways having a double track and doing a large
amount of business it becomes very necessary to announce to the flagmen at railway crossings the approach of
trains, so as to give them time to stop all crossing of the tracks. On railway lines provided with
electro-semaphores there may be used for this purpose those small apparatus that have been styled semaphore
repeaters.
Mr. Lartigue has invented two automatic apparatus, by means of which the train itself signals its approach.
The spring, R, on being depressed tilts the box containing the mercury, closes the circuit, and causes an alarm,
S, located at the crossing, to immediately ring. In this alarm (Fig. 8) a piece, P, is disconnected by the passage
of the current into the electro-magnet, E, which attracts the armature, a, and, a permanent current being set up,
the apparatus operates like an ordinary alarm, until the piece, P, is placed by hand in its first position again.
When one of the buttons, b, is pressed, one of the levers of the key-board arrangement touches the disk, M,
which is insulated from the other portions of the key-board, and the current then passes from the terminal C to
M, and there bifurcating, one portion of it goes to the bobbins of the apparatus and thence to the earth, while
the other goes to actuate the correspondence apparatus. The index-hands of the two apparatus thereupon begin
their movement simultaneously, and only stop when the pressure is removed from the button and the current
is consequently interrupted. H is a ratchet-wheel, which, like the key-board, is insulated from the rest of the
apparatus. The button, K, located over each of the dials, serves to bring the index-needles back to their
position under the cross shown in Fig. 12. The key, X, serves for winding up the clock-work movement.
Electrical Controllers for Water-Tanks.—The object of these apparatus is to warn the person in charge
of a water-tank that the latter is full, and that he must stop the engine-pump; or, that the tank is empty, and
that he must at once proceed to fill it. The Company of the North has on exhibition two such
apparatus—one of them Lartigue's, and the other Vérité's.
As the Opera does not give representations every day, Mr. Ader has had the idea of occupying the attention of
the public on Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday with the telephonic effects of flourishes of trumpets,
which imitate pretty well the effects of French horns. These experiments have taken place in the hall in which
is installed the little theater, and we must really say that in the effects produced French horns count for
nothing.—La Lumiere Electrique.
WATCHMAN'S DETECTER.
We herewith illustrate an exceedingly simple form of detecter, to show if the night watchmen perform their
visits regularly and punctually. In the case, C, is a clockwork apparatus driving the axle, S, at the end of which
is a worm which gears into the wheel of the drum, D. The rotation of D, thus obtained unrolls a strip of paper
from the other drum, D. This paper passes over the poles of as many electro-magnets as there are points to be
visited, and underneath the armatures of these electro-magnets. Each armature has a sharp point fixed on its
under side, and when a current passing through the coils causes the attraction of the armature, this point
perforates the paper. The places to be visited are connected electrically with the binding screws shown, and
the watchman has merely to press a button to make the electric circuit complete. It has been found in practice
that plain paper answers every purpose, as the clock giving an almost uniform motion enables the reader, after
having seen the perforated slips once or twice, to determine fairly well the time which elapses between each
pressure of the button.—The Engineer.
WATCHMAN'S DETECTER
INTEGRATING APPARATUS.
At a recent meeting of the London Physical Society, Mr. C. Vernon Boys read a paper on "Integrating
Apparatus." After referring to his original "cart" machine for integrating, described at a former meeting of the
society, he showed how he had been led to construct the new machine exhibited, in which a cylinder is caused
to reciprocate longitudinally in contact with a disk, and give the integral by its rotation. Integrators were of
three kinds: (1) radius machines; (2) cosine machines; (3) tangent machines. Sliding friction and inertia render
the first two kinds unsuitable where there are delicate forces or rapid variation in the function to be integrated.
Tangent machines depend on pure rolling, and the inertia and friction are inappreciable. They are, therefore,
more practical than the other sort. It is to this class that Mr. Boys' machines belong. The author then described
a theoretical tangent integrator depending on the mutual rolling of two smoke rings, and showed how the
steering of a bicycle or wheelbarrow could be applied to integrate directly with a cylinder either the quotient
or product of two functions. If the tangent wheel is turned through a right angle at starting, the machine will
integrate reciprocals, or it can be made to integrate functions by an inverse process. If instead of a cylinder
some other surface of evolution is employed as an integrating surface, then special integrations can be
effected. He showed a polar planimeter in which the integrating surface is a sphere. A special use of these
integrators is for finding the total work done by a fluid pressure reciprocating engine. The difference of
pressure on the two sides of the piston determines the tangent of the inclination of the tangent wheel which
runs on the integrating cylinder; while the motion of the latter is made to keep time with that of the piston. In
this case the number of evolutions of the cylinder measures the total amount of work done by the engine. The
disk cylinder integrator may also be applied to find the total amount of work transmitted by shafting or belting
from one part of a factory to another. An electric current meter may be made by giving inclination to the disk,
which is for this purpose made exceedingly small and delicate, by means of a heavy magnetic needle deflected
by the current. This, like Edison's, is a direction meter; but a meter in which no regard is paid to the direction
WATCHMAN'S DETECTER. 37
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
of the current can be made by help of an iron armature of such a shape that the force with which it is attracted
to fill the space between the poles of an electro-magnet is inversely as its displacement. Then by resisting this
motion by a spring or pendulum the movement is proportional to the current, and a tangent wheel actuated by
this movement causes the reciprocating cylinder on which it runs to integrate the current strength. Mr. Boys
exhibited two such electric energy meters, that is, machines which integrate the product of the current strength
by the difference of potential between two points with respect to time. In these the main current is made to
pass through a pair of concentric solenoids, and in the annular space between these is hung a solenoid, the
upper half of which is wound in the opposite direction to the lower half. By the use of what Mr. Boys calls
"induction traps" of iron, the magnetic force is confined to a small portion of the suspended solenoid, and by
this means the force is independent of the position. The solenoid is hung to one end of a beam, and its motion
is resisted by a pendulum weight, by which the energy meters may be regulated like clocks to give standard
measure. The beam carries the tangent wheels, and the rotation of the cylinder gives the energy expanded in
foot-pounds or other measures. The use of an equal number of turns in opposite directions on the movable
solenoid causes the instrument to be uninfluenced by external magnetic forces. Mr. Boys showed on the
screen an image of an electric arc, and by its side was a spot of light, whose position indicated the energy, and
showed every flicker of the light and fluctuation of current in the arc. He showed on the screen that if the
poles are brought too near the energy expended is less, though the current is stronger, and that if the poles are
too far apart, though the electromotive force is greater the energy is less; so that the apparatus may be made to
find the distance at which the greatest energy, and so the greatest heat and light, may be produced.
At the conclusion of the paper, Prof. W.G. Adams and Prof. G.C. Foster could not refrain from expressing
their high admiration of the ingenious and able manner in which Mr. Boys had developed the subject.
INTEGRATING APPARATUS. 38
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
of the highest commendation as an important improvement upon previous ones, they are still open to some
objections. One barrier to their general adoption is their increased cost. It is true that superior quality implies
higher prices, but when the prices exceed so much those of cloth linings, it is difficult to induce road
managers to increase expenses by introducing the new linings, when the great object is to reduce expenses.
Another objection to wood linings is their liability to injury from heat and moisture, a liability which results
from the way in which they are put together. A heated roof or a leak swells the veneering, and in many cases
takes it off in strips. To obviate these objections, I have, during the past eighteen months, been experimenting
with some materials that would be less affected by these causes, and at the same time make a handsome
ceiling. About a year ago I fitted up one car in this way, and it has proved a success. The material used is
heavy tar-board pressed into the form of the roof and strengthened by burlaps. It is then grained and decorated
in the usual manner, and when finished has the same appearance as the veneers, will wear as well, and can be
finished at much less cost.—D.D. Robertson.
Fig. 1
Having the killed spirits, as it is sometimes called, ready, file the end of your iron or bit and plunge this part
into the spirits, then touch your dipped end with some fine solder, and dip it again and again into the spirits
until you have a good tinned face upon your iron, etc.; next you require a spirit-brush.
SPIRIT-BRUSH.
You can make this by cutting a few bristles out of a broom or brush, push them into a short piece of compo
tube, say ¼ in., and hammer up the end to hold the bristles; next cut the ends of the bristles to about 3/8 in.
long, and the brush is ready for use.
For small pipes, such as from ½ in. to 1 in. "stout pipe," you may pull them round without trouble or danger;
but for larger sizes, say, from 1¼ in. to 2 in., some little care is necessary, even in stout pipes.
Fig. 37 illustrates a badly made bend, and also shows how it comes together at the throat, X, and back, E; L is
the enlarged section of X E, looking at the pipe endways. The cause of this contraction is pulling the bend too
quickly, and too much at a time, without dressing in the sides at B B as follows: After you have pulled the
pipe round until it just begins to flatten, take a soft dresser, or a piece of soft wood, and a hammer, and turn
the pipe on its side as at Fig. 37; then strike the bulged part of the pipe from X B toward E, until it appears
round like section K. Now pull your pipe round again as before, and keep working it until finished. If you find
that it becomes smaller at the bend, take a long bolt and work the throat part out until you have it as required.
FIG. 37.
BENDING WITH WATER (LIGHT PIPES).
Fig. 39. This style of bending is much in use abroad, but not much practiced in London, though a splendid
method of work.
FIG. 39.
It is a well known fact that, practically speaking, for such work, water is incompressible, but may be turned
and twisted about to any shape, provided it is inclosed in a solid case—Fig. 39 is that case. The end, A,
is stopped, and the stopcock, B, soldered into the other end. Now fill up this pipe quite full with warm water
and shut the cock, take the end, A, and pull round the pipe, at the same time dressing the molecules of lead
from the throat, C, toward D E, which will flow if properly worked.
You can hammer away as much as you please, but be quick about it, so that the water does not cool down,
thereby contracting; in fact, you should open the cock now and then, and recharge it to make sure of this.
SAND BENDING.
This is a very old method of bending lead pipes, and answers every purpose for long, easy bends. Proceed in
this way: The length of the pipe to be 5 ft., fill and well ram this pipe solid with sand 2 ft. up, then have ready
a metal-pot of very hot sand to fill the pipe one foot up, next fill the pipe up with more cold sand, ramming it
as firmly as possible, stop the end and work it round as you did the water bend, but do not strike it too hard in
one place, or you will find it give way and require to be dummied out again, or if you cannot get the dent out
with the dummy send a ball through (see "Bending with Balls").
FIG. 40.
THREE-BALL OR LEAD DRIVING BALL AND DOUBLE-BALL BENDING.
Fig. 41 shows a method of bending with three balls, one of lead being used as a driver attached to a piece of
twine. This is a country method, and very good, because the two balls are kept constantly to the work. First,
put the two balls just where you require the bend, then pull the pipe slightly round; take the leaden ball and
drop it on the ball, B, then turn the pipe the other end up and drop it on A, and do so until your bend is the
required shape. You must be careful not to let your leaden ball touch the back of the pipe. Some use a piece of
smaller leaden pipe run full of lead for the ball, C, and I do not think it at all a bad method, as you can get a
much greater weight for giving the desired blow to your boxwood balls.
FIG. 41.
BENDING WITH WINDLASS AND BRASS BALL.
This is an excellent method of bending small pipes. Fig. 42 will almost describe itself. A is a brass or gun
metal ball having a copper or wire rope running through it, and pulled through the flattened part of the pipe as
shown. It will be quite as well to tack the bend down to the bench, as at B, when pulling the ball through; well
dress the lead from front to back to thicken the back. I have seen some plumbers put an extra thickness of lead
on the back before beginning to bend. Notice: nearly all solid pressed pipes are thicker on one side than the
other (as before remarked), always place the thickest part at the back.
FIG. 42.
HYDRAULIC OR CUP-LEATHER AND BALL BENDING.
Fig 43. This is my own method of pipe-bending, and is very useful when properly handled with plenty of
force, but requires great care and practice. You must have a union sweated on the end, A, Fig. 43, and the ball,
B, to fit the pipe. The cup-leather, E, should have a plate fixed on the front to press the ball forward. Pull up
the pipe as you please, and pump the ball through; it will take all the dents out, and that too very quickly.
FIG. 43.
BENDING BY SPLITTING OR SPLIT-MADE BENDS.
This method of bending is much practiced in the provinces, and, for anything I know to the contrary, is one of
the best methods in use, as by it you are likely to get a good substance of metal on the back of the bend
whether the plumber be a good or a bad workman. Proceed as follows: Cut the pipe down the center to suit the
length of your bend, as shown at A B, Fig. 44. It will be quite as well if you first set out this bend on the
bench, then you may measure round the back, as from C to L, to obtain the distance of the cut, which should
always be three or four inches longer than the bend. You may also in this way obtain the correct length for the
throat, G H I; here you will see that you have a quantity of lead to spare, i.e., from A to E, all of which has to
be got rid of in uncut bends—some plumbers shift from front to back, but how many? Not one in
twenty. After you have cut the pipe, open the throat part, bend out the sides, and pull this part round a little at
a time, then with a dummy, Fig. 38, work the internal part of the throat outward to as nearly the shape as you
can. Go carefully to work, and do not attempt to work up the sides, A D B, until your throat is nearly to the
proper shape, after which you may do so with a small boxwood dresser or bossing-stick (It is not necessary to
explain minutely what a bosser or dressing-stick is, as they can be bought at almost any
lead-merchants—the dresser is shown at E, Fig. 1; the bossing-stick is somewhat similar, the only
difference being that it has a rounded face instead of flat.) Keep the dummy up against the sides when truing
it. If you have proceeded properly with this throat part, you will not require to work up the sides or edges, as
in working the throat back the sides will come up by themselves. Next take the back, pull it round a little at a
time, the dummy being held inside, with your dresser work the two edges and sides slowly round, and the
back will follow. Never strike the back from the underside with the dummy. After you have made a dozen or
two you will be able to make them as fast as you please, but do not hurry them at first, as the greater part of
this work is only to be learned by patient application, perseverance, and practice.
FIG. 44.
After you have made the bend it will require to be soldered, but before you can do this you must have the joint
quite perfect and the edges true one with the other. A good bender will not require to touch his edges at all,
but a novice will have to rasp and trim them up so that they come together. Having your edges true, soil them,
take a gauge-hook, which may be described as a shave-hook with a gauge attached, and shave it about 1/8 in.
each side; now solder it to look like the solder A, Fig. 45, which is done as follows: With some fine solder
tack the joint at A D B, Fig. 44, put on some resin, and with a well-heated copper-bit drop some solder
roughly on the point from B to A, then draw the bit over it again to float the solder, being especially careful
not to let the joint open when coming off at A. Some plumbers think fit to begin here, but that is a matter of
no importance. Do not forget that if your joint is not properly prepared, that is to say, true and even, it is sure
to be a failure, and will have a "higgledy-piggledy" appearance. Some difference of opinion exists as to the
best method of making these joints: one workman will make a good joint by drawing it while, on the other
hand, another one will do it equally well by wiping it. Drawing will be fully explained in a part on pipe
making. It may, however, be here mentioned that it is a method of making the joint by floating the solder
along the joint with the ladle and plumbing-iron.
FIG. 45.
It is not uncommon for plumbers to make their bends with only one joint on the back.
PULLING UP BENDS.
In London, it is the favorite plan to make bends without cutting them. Fig. 46. It is done by taking a length of
pipe, and, just where you require the bend, lay it (with the seam at the side) upon a pillow, made by tightly
filling a sack with sand, wood shavings, or sawdust; have some shavings ready to hand and a good lath, also a
short length of mandrel about 3 ft. long and about ½ in. smaller than the pipe, and a dummy as shown at A B,
Fig. 56. Now, all being ready, put a few burning shavings into the throat of the bend, just to get heat enough to
make it fizz, which you can judge by spitting on it. When this heat is acquired withdraw the fire, and let the
laborer quickly place the end of the mandrel into the pipe, and pull the pipe up while you place a sack or
anything else convenient across the throat of the bend, then pull the pipe up a little, just sufficient to dent it
across the throat. Now, with a hot dummy, dummy out the dent, until it is round like the other part of the pipe.
Keep at this until your bend is made, occasionally turning the pipe or its side and giving it a sharp blow on the
side with the soft or hornbeam dresser; this is when the sides run out as in Fig. 37. Never strike the back part
of the bend from inside with the dummy, but work the lead from the throat to the back with a view to
thickening the back.
PULLING UP BENDS. 50
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
FIG. 46.
SET-OFFS.
A set-off is nothing more than a double bend, as shown at Fig. 47, and made in much the same manner. D is
the long end of the pipe. Always make this bend first and pull it up quite square, as it will be found to go a
little back when pulling up the other bend; if you can make the two together so much the better, as you can
then work the stuff from the throat of one bend into the back of the other. The different shaped dummies are
also here shown: F a round-nosed dummy, G a double bent dummy, H a single bent, I straight, J
hand-dummy, ABN a long bent dummy shown at Fig. 38.
SET-OFFS. 51
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
FIG. 47.
BAD BENDS.
These can always be detected by examining them in their backs, as at Fig. 48; take a small dresser and tap the
pipe a few times round ABD to test for the thickness. Strike it hard enough to just dent it; next strike the back
part of the pipe, E, with the same force, and if it dents much more it is not an equally-made bend. I have seen
some of these much-praised London-made bends that could be easily squeezed together by the pressure of the
thumb and finger. N.B.—Care must be taken not to reduce or enlarge the size of the bore at the bend.
BAD BENDS. 52
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
FIG. 48.
BAD FALLS IN BENDS.
The fall given in bending lead pipes should be considered of quite as much importance as making the bends of
equal thickness especially for pipes, as shown in Fig. 49. In this Fig. you have a drawing of a bad bend. From
A to B there is no fall whatever, as also from B to C; such bending is frequently done and fixed in and about
London, which is not only more work for the plumber, but next to useless for soil-pipes. Fig. 50 shows how
this bend should be made with a good fall from A to J, also from M to N; the method of making these bends
requires no further explanation. R, P, and K are the turnpins for opening the ends, the method of which will be
explained in a future paragraph on "Preparing for Fixing."
FIG. 49.
FIG. 50.
FIG. 51.
FIG. 52.
I have also noticed many of these traps in the Sanitary Exhibition at South Kensington, made by Graham and
Fleming, plumbers, who deserve a medal for their perseverance and skill, not only for the excellence of their
bends, but also for some other branches of the trade, such as joint-wiping, etc., which is unquestionably the
best work sent into this Exhibition—in fact, quite equal to that which was shown at the Exhibition of
1862. I shall treat further of these bends in an article on Fixing, in a future part.
FIG. 53.
(To be continued)
[1]
Mrs. Florence E. Cory, Principal of the Woman's Institute of Technical Design, which was recently
established in this city, advanced the proposition that whatever could be done by man in decorative art could
be done as well by women, and she made an earnest plea to her own sex to fit themselves by proper training to
engage in remunerative industrial work. Mrs. Cory enjoys the distinction of being the first woman who ever
attempted to make designs for carpets in this country. She said that four years ago, when she came to this city,
there was no school at which was taught any kind of design as applied to industrial purposes, except at Cooper
Union, where design was taught theoretically but not practically. During the past year or two, however, in
many branches of industrial design women have been pressing to the front, and last year eighteen ladies were
graduated from the Boston Institute of Technology. Most of these ladies are now working as designers for
various manufacturers, eight are in print factories, designing for chintz and calico, two have become designers
for oil-cloths, one is designing for a carpet company, and one for a china factory. Carpet designing, said Mrs.
Cory, is especially fitted for women's work. It opens a wide field to them that is light, pleasant, and
remunerative. The demand for good carpet designs far exceeds the supply, and American manufactures are
sending to Europe, particularly England and France, for hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of designs
yearly. If the same quality of designs could be made in this country the manufacturers would gladly patronize
home talent. One carpet firm alone pays $100,000 a year for its designing department, and of this sum several
thousands of dollars go to foreign markets. More technical knowledge is required for carpet designing than for
any other industrial design. It is necessary to have a fair knowledge of the looms, runnings of color, and
manner of weaving. Hitherto this knowledge has been very difficult, if not impossible, for women to obtain.
But now there are a few places where competent instruction in this branch of industrial art is given.
There are several kinds of work connected with this business that may be done at home by those who wish,
and at very fair prices. The price of copying an ingrain design is from $3 to $6 per sheet. The price for an
original design of the same size is from $10 to $20. For Brussels or tapestry sketches, which may be made at
home, provided they are as good as the average sketch, the artists receive from $15 to $30. For moquettes,
Axminsters, and the higher grades of carpets some artists are paid as high as $200. The average price,
however, is from $25 to $100. These designs may all be made at home, carried to the manufacturer, submitted
to his judgment, and if approved, will be purchased. After the purchase, if the manufacturer desires the artist
to put the design upon the lines and the artist chooses to do so, the work may still be done at home, and the
pay will range from $20 to $75 extra for each design so finished. The average length of time for making a
design is, for ingrains, two per week; Brussels sketch, three per week; Brussels on the lines, one in two weeks;
moquettes and Axminsters, one in two or three weeks, depending of course upon the elaborateness and size of
the pattern. When the work is done at the designing-rooms, and the artist is required to give his or her time
from 9 o'clock in the morning until 5 in the afternoon, the salaries run about as follows: For a good original
ingrain designer, from $2,000 to $3,000 per year. A good Brussels and tapestry designer from $1,500 to
$6,000 per year. Copyists and shaders, from $3 to $10 per week.
Mrs. R.A. Morse advocated the establishment of schools of industrial art, in which there would be special
departments so that young girls might be trained to follow some practical calling. Mrs. Dr. French said that
unskilled labor and incompetent workmen were the bane and disgrace of this country, and she thought that the
field of industrial art was very inviting to women. She disparaged the custom of decorating chinaware and
little fancy articles, and said that if the time thus wasted by women was applied to the study of practical
designing those who persevered in the latter branch of industrial art might earn liberal wages. Miss Requa, of
the Public School Department, explained that elementary lessons in drawing were taught in the public schools.
Mme. Roch, who is thoroughly familiar with industrial and high art in both this country and in Europe, said
that if the American people would apply themselves more carefully to the study of designing they could easily
produce as good work as came from abroad. The beauties to be seen in American nature alone surpassed
anything that she had ever witnessed in the old countries.
"We cannot use English canvas, or 'shirting,' as you call it," said one of our hosts; "it seems to contain so
much fatty matter." The German material, on the other hand, would appear to be fit for photography as soon
as it had been thoroughly worked in hot water and rinsed. Here, in this apartment, paved with red brick, we
see several pieces of canvas drying. It is a large room, very clean, here and there a washing trough, and in one
corner two or three large horizontal baths. The appearance is that of a wash-house, except that all the
assistants are men, and not washerwomen; there is plenty of water everywhere, and the floor is well drained to
allow of its running off. We are to be favored with a sight of the whole process, and this is the first operation.
Into one of the horizontal baths, measuring about 5 by 4 feet, is put the salting solution. It is a bath that can be
rocked, or inclined in any direction, for its center rests upon a ball-and-socket joint. It is of papier mâché, the
inside covered with white enamel. Formerly, only bromine salts were employed, but now the following
formula is adopted:
The canvas is hung up to dry; but as sometime must elapse before this particular piece will be ready for
sensitizing, we proceed with another canvas which is fit and proper for that process. The room, we should
have mentioned, is provided with windows of yellow glass; but as there is plenty of light nevertheless, the fact
hardly strikes one on entering. The sensitizing, with a solution of nitrate of silver, is conducted with a glass
rod in the same way as before, the solution being thus compounded:
This is done in a room adjoining. We lift a curtain and enter a space that reminds one of the underground
regions of a theater. There are curtained partitions and wooden structures on every hand; dark murky corners
combined with brilliant illumination. Messrs. Winter use the electric light for enlarging, a lamp of Siemens'
driven by a six-horse power engine. The lamp is outside the enlarging room, and three large lenses, or
condensers, on three sides of the light, permit the making of three enlargements at one end at the same time.
(See Fig.)
The condenser collects the rays, and these shine into a camera arrangement in which the small negative is
contained. The enlarged image is then projected, magic lantern fashion, upon the screen, to which is fastened
the sensitized canvas. The screen in question is upon a tramway—there are three tramways and three
screens in all, as shown in our sketch—and for this reason it is easy to advance and retire the canvas,
for the purpose of properly focusing it.
Even with the electric light now employed, it is necessary to expose a considerable time to secure a vigorous
impression. From ten minutes to half an hour is the usual period, determined by the assistant, whose
experienced eye is the only guide. We should estimate the distance of the cameras from the enlarging
apparatus to be about fourteen or fifteen feet in the instance we saw, and when the canvas was taken down, a
distinct outline of the image was visible on its surface.
By the way, we ought to mention that the canvas is in a decidedly limp state during these operations. It has
just sufficient stiffness to keep smooth on the screen, and that is all; the treatment it has received appears to
have imparted no increase of substance to it. Again it is brought into the red-brick washing apartment, and
again treated in one of the white enameled baths as before. This time it is the developer that is contained in the
bath, and the small limp tablecloth—for that is what it looks like—after being drawn over the
glass rod, is put back into the bath, and the developing solution rocked to and fro over it. The whiteness of the
bath lining assists one in forming a judgment of the image as it now gradually develops and grows stronger.
Here is the formula of the developer:
The final washing of the canvas is very thorough. Again it is treated with all the vigor with which a good
laundry-maid attacks dirty linen, the canvas, in the end, being consigned to a regular washing-machine, in
which it is systematically worked for some time.
When the canvas picture at last is finished, it presents a very rough appearance, by reason of the tiny fibers
that stand erect all over the surface. To lay these, and also to improve the surface generally, the canvas is
waxed, the fabric is stretched, and a semi-fluid mass rubbed into it, heat being used in the process, which not
only gives brilliancy, but seems also to impart transparency to the shadows of the picture. The result is a
pleasant finish, without vulgar glare or glaze, the high lights remaining beautifully pure and white.
Of course, the price of these canvas enlargements varies with the amount of artistic work subsequently put
upon them; but the usual charge made by Messrs. Winter for a well-finished life-size portrait, three quarter
length, is sixty florins, or about £5 sterling as the exchange now stands. Besides working for photographers,
Messrs. Winter are reproducing a large number of classic paintings and cartoons by photography on canvas in
this way (some of them almost absolutely untouched), and these, as may be supposed, are finding a very large
sale among dealers. Such copies must necessarily be of considerable value to artists and collectors, and
altogether it would seem that Messrs. Winter have hit upon a novel undertaking, which bids fair to make them
a handsome return for the outlay (large as it undoubtedly has been) made upon their Vienna
establishment.—Photo. News.
By P. Casamajor.
In previous communications I have given processes for detecting the adulteration of cane-sugar by
starch-sugar. The adulteration of sugar-house sirups by starch glucose is still more extensively practiced than
that of sugar, and a great portion of sirups sold by retailers in this market is adulterated with starch glucose.
This form of adulteration may be very easily detected by the use of strong methylic alcohol, in which the
alcoholometer of Tralles or of Gay Lussac will indicate about 93½°.
A straight sugar-house sirup when mixed with three times its volume of this strong methylic alcohol will
dissolve by stirring, giving a very slight turbidity, which remains suspended; while sirups containing the usual
admixture of starch sugar give a very turbid liquid, which separates, when left at rest, into two layers, the
lower being a thick viscous deposit containing the glucose sirup.
It may not be useless to mention that if a straight sugar-house sirup of about 40° B. density is stirred with
three times its volume of ethylic alcohol of about 93½° the sirup will not dissolve. Hence ethylic alcohol of
this strength is not suitable for distinguishing a sirup mixed with starch glucose from a straight sugar-house
sirup.
The presence of starch glucose in sugar-house molasses may be easily detected by the optical saccharometer
when the sirup has the usual density of about 40° B., and when starch sugar has been added in the usual
quantities.
For making the test the usual weight should be taken (16.35 grammes for Duboscq's saccharometer, and
26.048 grammes for Ventzke's instrument). The direct test should show a percentage of sugar not higher than
the number of Baumé degrees indicating the density, and it may be from 2 to 3 per cent. lower. To understand
this, we must refer to the composition of cane-sugar molasses of 40° B.:
Sugar 37.5
Insoluble impurities 37.5
Water 25
If the direct test should indicate 55 per cent. of sugar, and if the molasses were straight, the composition
would be—
Sugar 55
Soluble impurities 20
Water 25
Now, a product of this composition would not be a clear sirup at 40° B., but a mixture of sirup and crystals.
Therefore, if the product is a clear sirup at 40° B., and it tests 55 per cent., it cannot be straight.
The presence of starch glucose in sugar-house molasses may also be detected by the copper test. The
possibility of applying this test, as well as those already indicated, rests on the fact that starch glucose is
always added in very large quantities for the purposes of adulteration. A very small addition could not be
satisfactorily detected.
The detection by the copper test rests on the observation that very nearly one-half of the soluble impurities in
sugar-house molasses consists of glucose in the shape of inverted sugar. We have seen above that for a
molasses of 40° B. the soluble impurities amount to about 37½ per cent. We may, then, lay down the rule: that
the percentage of glucose shown by the copper test cannot, in a straight sugar-house molasses, be much
greater than one-half of the number expressing the density in Baumé degrees. The reason is obvious from
what has been said of the test by the optical saccharometer.
[1]
By P. Casamajor. 63
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
False Vermilion.—A curious case has been noticed in Germany, where a small cargo of vermilion was
purchased, and, upon being analyzed, turned out to be red oxide of lead colored by eosine. This is an entirely
novel sophistication. The eosine was separated from the oxide of lead by digesting the product for twenty-four
hours in very strong alcohol. A much shorter time is sufficient to color the spirit enough to enable an expert
chemist to detect the presence of this splendid organic coloring matter. Another kind of "vermilion" consists
entirely of peroxide of iron, prepared especially to imitate the brilliant and costly sulphide of mercury, which
it does very well, and is largely used in England, France, and America.
By M.V. Deshayes.
No body among the metals and the metalloids (silicium, titanium, tungsten, chromium, phosphorus, etc.) has
occupied a more prominent position in modern metallurgy than manganese, and it is chiefly due to its great
affinity for oxygen. When this substance was discovered, more than a century ago (1774), by the celebrated
Swedish chemist and mineralogist, Gahn, by treating the black oxide of manganese in the crucible, no one
would have thought that the new element, so delicate by itself, without any direct industrial use, would
become, in the middle of the nineteenth century, one of the most powerful and necessary instruments for the
success of the Bessemer process, as well for its deoxidizing properties as for the qualities which it imparts to
steel, increasing its resistance, its durability, and its elasticity, as has been shown elsewhere.
Without entering into a complete history (for it is beyond the task which we have here assumed),1 it will not
be without interest to recall how, when manganese was first obtained in a pure state, that it was supposed that
it would remain simply an object of curiosity in the laboratory; but when its presence was proved in
spiegeleisen and when it came to be considered an essential ingredient in the best German and English works
for cutlery steel (where it is thrown into the crucible as the peroxide), then we find that its qualities become
better and better appreciated; and it is surprising that no technologist ever devoted his attention to the
production of manganese alloys.
It was not till after the investigations of Dr. Percy, Tamm, Prieger, and Bessemer, who employed crucibles for
the production of these alloys, that Hendersen received the idea of utilizing it in the Siemens furnace. So
important a compound could not remain unemployed. The works at Terre Noire produced, by the Martin
furnace, for a number of years, ferro-manganese of 70 to 80 per cent. Shortly afterward, when competition in
the market was established, the works at Carniola and at Carinthia, some English factories, and more
especially the works at Saint-Louis, near Marseilles, of Terre Noire, of Montluçon, etc., successfully adopted
the manufacture of ferro-manganese with the blast furnace, which is without doubt the method best adapted
for the reduction of metallic oxides, as well in consideration of the reactions as from an economical point of
view. Before very long it was possible to produce, by the blast furnace, alloys of 40, 60, 80, and even 86 per
cent., in using the hot air apparatus of Siemens, Cowper, and Witwell, with the employment of good coke, and
principally by calculating the charges for the fusion in such a manner as to obtain an extra basic and refractory
slag.
Following in the same path, the Phœnix Co., of Ruhrort, sent, in 1880, to the Metallurgical Exposition
of Dusseldorf, samples of ferro-manganese obtained in a blast furnace, with an extra basic slag in which the
silica was almost entirely replaced by alumina. The works of L'Esperance, at Oberhausen, exhibited similar
products, quite pure as to sulphur and phosphorus, and they had a double interest at the exhibition, in
consideration of the agitation over the Thomas and Gilchrist process (see the discussions which were raised at
the meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute). This process unfortunately requires for its prompt success the use
of a very large quantity of spiegel or of ferro-manganese, in order to sufficiently carburize and deoxidize the
burnt iron, which is the final product of the blowing.
The production of ferro-manganese by the blast furnace depends upon the following conditions.
1. A high temperature.
These different conditions may be obtained with but slight variations at the different works, but the condition
of a high temperature is one of the most important considerations, not only for the alloys of manganese, but
equally as well for the alloys of iron, manganese, silicium, those of chromium, of tungsten, etc. It is also
necessary to study the effects produced either in the crucible or in the blast furnace, and to examine the ores
which for a long while have been regarded as not reducible.
The works of Terre Noire especially made at the same time, in the blast furnace, ferro-silicon with manganese,
alloys which are daily becoming more important for the manufacture of steels tempered soft and half soft
without blowing.
These alloys, rich in silicon, present the peculiarity of being poor in carbon, the amount of this latter element
varying with the proportions of manganese. In addition to the alloys used in the iron and steel industry, we
shall proceed to relate the recent progress obtained in the metallurgy of other materials (especially copper) by
the use of cupro-manganese:
Mn. C. Si. S. P.
per cent.
A 18 to 20 2 to 3 10 to 12 Extra Quality for soft metals.
Traces
B 15 to 18 3.00 10 to 8 scarcely About Medium Quality.
0.100.
C 15 to 10 3.25 8 to 6 perceptible.
D 5 to 10 3.50 4 to 6 Ordinary for hard metals.
The first alloys of manganese and copper were made in 1848, by Von Gersdorff; soon after Prof. Schrötter of
Vienna made compounds containing 18 or 20 per cent. of manganese by reducing in a crucible the oxides of
copper and manganese mixed with wood charcoal and exposing to a high heat.
These alloys were quite ductile, very hard, very tenacious, and capable of receiving a beautiful polish; their
color varies from white to rose color, according to the respective proportions of the two bodies; they are
particularly interesting on account of the results which were obtained by adding them to certain metallic
fusions.
It is well known that in the fining of copper by oxidation there is left in the fined metal the suboxide of
copper, which must then be removed by the refining process, using carbon to reduce the copper to its metallic
state. M. Manhès, taking advantage of the greater affinity of manganese for oxygen, found that if this last
element was introduced into the bath of copper during the operation of refining, the copper suboxide would be
reduced and the copper obtained in its metallic condition. For this purpose during these last years real
cupro-manganese has been prepared, occupying the same position to copper as the spiegel or the
ferro-manganese does toward the manufacture of steel. M. Manhès used these same alloys for the fusion of
bronze and brass, and recommended the following proportions:
By M.V. Deshayes. 65
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
According to M. Manhès a slight proportion of manganese added to bronze appears to increase its resistance
and its ductility, as is shown in the following table, provided, however, that these different alloys have been
subjected to the same operations from a physical point of view; that is, pouring, rolling, etc.
Such results show beyond contradiction the great interest there is in economically producing alloys of copper,
manganese, tin, zinc, etc. In addition, they may be added to metallic fusions, for deoxidizing and also to
communicate to the commercial alloys (such as bronze, brass, etc.) the greatest degree of resistance and
tenacity.
While many investigators have tried to form alloys of copper and manganese by combining them in the
metallic state (that is to say, by the simultaneous reduction of their oxides), the Hensler Bros., of Dillenburg,
have found it best to first prepare the metallic manganese and then to alloy it in proper proportions with other
metals. Their method consisted of reducing the pure pyrolusite in large plumbago crucibles, in the presence of
carbon and an extra basic flux; the operation was carried on in a strong coke fire, and at the end of about six
hours the crude manganese is poured out, having the following composition:
Manganese 90 to 92
Carbon 6 to 6.5
Iron 0.5 to 1.5
Silicon 0.5 to 1.2
By refining, the manganese can be brought up to 94 to 95 per cent. of purity. It is from this casting of pure
manganese that is obtained the substance used as a base for the alloys. This metal is white, crystalline, when
exposed to the damp air slowly oxidizes, and readily combines with copper to form the cupro-manganese of
the variety having the composition—
Copper 70
Manganese 30
Cast in ingots or in pigs it becomes an article of commerce which may be introduced in previously determined
proportions into bronze, gun metal, bell metal, brass, etc. It may also be used, as we have already mentioned,
for the refining of copper according to Manhès's process.
By M.V. Deshayes. 66
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Tests made from this standpoint at the works of Mansfield have shown that the addition of 0.45 per cent. of
cupro-manganese is sufficient to give tenacity to the copper, which, thus treated, will not contain more than
0.005 to 0.022 of oxygen, the excess passing off with the manganese into the scorias.
On the other hand, the addition of cupro-manganese is recommended, when it is desirable to cast thin pieces
of the metal, such as tubes, caldrons, kitchen utensils, which formerly could only be obtained by beating and
stamping.
The tenacity obtained for tubes of only three centimeters in diameter and 1.75 millimeters in thickness is such
that they are able to withstand a pressure of 1,100 pounds to the square inch.
The manganese bronze, which we have previously referred to, and which is used by the White Brass
Company of London, is an alloy of copper, with from one to ten per cent. of manganese; the highest qualities
of resistance, ductility, tenacity, and durability are obtained with one to four per cent. of manganese, while
with twelve per cent. the metal becomes too weak for industrial uses.
Copper 70.00
Manganese 15.00
Zinc 15.00
But as this alloy often breaks in rolling, the preference is given to the following proportions:
Copper 80.00
Manganese 15.00
Zinc 5.00
This results in a white, ductile metal, which is easily worked and susceptible of receiving a beautiful polish,
like the alloys of nickel, which it may in time completely replace.
The bronzes of manganese, tin, and zinc were perhaps the first upon which important investigations were
made; they were obtained by adding to an alloy of copper, zinc, and tin (ordinary bronze) a definite quantity
of the cupro-manganese of the type indicated above (Cu 70, Mn 30). By this means the resistance is increased
fully nine per cent., probably in the same way as the copper, that is, by the deoxidizing effect of the
manganese, as both the copper and the tin are always more or less oxidized in ordinary bronzes.
By M.V. Deshayes. 67
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Manganese combines with tin just the same as it does with copper, and the proportion which is recommended
as giving the highest resistances is three to six per cent. of cupro-manganese.
However, notwithstanding the use of cupro-manganese, the tin, as in ordinary bronzes, has a tendency to
liquate in those portions of the mould which are the hottest, and which become solid the last, especially in the
case of moulds having a great width.
From a series of experiments made at Isabelle Hütte, it has been found that the metal which has the greatest
resisting qualities was obtained from
Copper 85.00
Manganese 6.00
Zinc 5.00
5 per cent. of cupro-manganese = manganese 1.00 remaining in the metal.
The best method of procedure is first to melt the copper in a crucible, and then to add the tin and the zinc;
finally the cupro-manganese is added just at the moment of pouring, as in the Manhès process; then the
reaction on the oxides is very effective, there is a boiling with scintillation similar to the action produced in
the Bessemer and Martin process when ferro-manganese is added to the bath of steel.
The following are some of the results obtained from thirteen alloys obtained in this manner. These samples
were taken direct from the casting and were tested with the machine at Friedrich-Wilhelms-hütte, and with the
one at the shops of the Rhine Railroad. Their resistance was considerably increased, as with the other alloys,
by rolling or hammering.
Limit Weight
of of
elasticity fracture
Cupro- in kilos in kilos Elongation,
Numbers. Nature of mould. Copper Tin. Zinc. manganese. per mm. per mm. percentage.
1 Sand 85.00 6.00 5.00 — 11.30 16.00 —
2 — 85.00 6.00 5.00 4.00 13.00 16.10 2.00
3 Cast. 87.00 8.70 4.30 4.00 — 19.40 —
4 — 85.00 6.90 5.00 6.00 — 18.80 6.00
5 — 85.00 6.00 5.00 6.00 — 19.75 7.00
6 — 85.00 6.00 5.00 10.00 — 17.15 4.00
7 Sand 87.00 5.20 4.33 3.47 — 19.70 8.70
8 — 87.00 5.20 4.33 3.47 — 19.70 8.90
9 — 85.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 16.80 22.00 —
10 — 74.00 10.00 5.00 3.30 13.80 18.70 —
11 — 78.70 8.00 (7.66 Pb) 3.30 13.80 20.70 —
( 8 Pb)
12 — 82.00 9.80 4.90 3.30 14.75 19.75 —
13 — 86.20 16.50 — 3.30 14.30 24.70 —
By M.V. Deshayes. 68
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
The results of the tests of ductility which are here given, with reference to the cupro-manganese, manganese
bronze, the alloys with zinc and tin, are taken from M.C. Hensler's very valuable communication to the Berlin
Society for the Advancement of the Industrial Arts.
These various alloys, as well as the phosphorus bronze, of which we make no mention here, are at present
very largely used in the manufacture of technical machines, as well as for supports, valves, stuffing-boxes,
screws, bolts, etc., which require the properties of resistance and durability. They vastly surpass in these
qualities the brass and like compounds which have been used hitherto for these purposes.—Bull. Soc.
Chim., Paris, xxxvi. p. 184.
[1]
By Dr. C. Krauch.
Differences obtained in the estimation of nitrogen in the above substances are frequently the source of much
annoyance. The cause of these discrepancies is chiefly due to the lack of uniformity in the material, and from
its not being in a sufficiently fine state during the combustion. The hair which is found in commerce for the
manufacture of fertilizers, is generally mixed with sand and dust. Wool dust often contains old buttons, pieces
of wood, shoe pegs, and all sorts of things. The flesh fertilizers are composed of light particles of flesh mixed
with the heavier bone dust.
Even after taking all possible precautions to finely comminute these substances by mechanical means, still
only imperfect results are obtained, for the impurities, that is to say, the sand, can never be so intimately
mixed with the lighter particles that a sample of 0.5 to 0.8 gramme, such as is used in the determination of
nitrogen, will correspond to the correct average contents. In substances such as dried blood, pulverization is
very tedious. A very good method of overcoming these difficulties, and of obtaining from the most mixed
substances a perfectly homogeneous mass, is that recommended by Grandeau1 of decomposing with sulphuric
acid—a method which as yet does not seem to be generally known. From a large quantity of the
substance to be examined, the coarse stones, etc., are removed by picking or sifting, and the prepared
substance, or in cases where the impurities cannot be separated, the original substance, is treated with
sulphuric acid; after it is decomposed, the acid is neutralized with calcium carbonate, and the nitrogen is
determined in this mass.
In order to operate rapidly, it is best to use as little sulphuric acid as possible. If too much sulphuric acid is
used, necessarily a large amount of calcium carbonate is essential to get it into proper condition for
pulverizing. Under such circumstances the percentage of nitrogen becomes very low, and a slight error will
become correspondingly high.
20 c.c. of concentrated sulphuric acid and 10 c.c. are sufficient for 30 to 40 grammes of material. After the
substance and liquid have been thoroughly stirred in a porcelain dish, they are warmed on a water bath and
continually stirred until the mass forms a homogeneous liquid. The sirupy liquid thus obtained is then mixed
with 80 to 100 grammes of pulverized calcium carbonate (calcspar), dried for fifteen minutes at 40 to 60° C.,
and after standing for one to two hours the dish and its contents are weighed. From the total weight the weight
of the dish is subtracted, which gives the weight of the calcium sulphate and the calcium carbonate, and the
known weight of the wool dust, etc. This material is then intimately ground, and 2 to 3 grammes of it are
taken for the determination of the nitrogen, which is then calculated for the original substance.
Although the given quantities of water and sulphuric acid hardly appear sufficient for such a large quantity of
hair or wool, still in the course of a few minutes to a quarter of an hour, after continual stirring, there is
obtained a liquid which, after the addition of the calcium carbonate, is readily converted into a pulverized
mass. Frequently a smaller quantity of sulphuric acid will suffice, especially if the material is moist. The chief
merit of this process is that in a short time a large quantity of material, having a uniform character, is
obtained. Its use is, therefore, recommended for general employment.
When the coarser stones, etc., are weighed, and the purified portion decomposed, absolutely correct results are
obtained, and in this way the awkward discrepancies from different analysts may be
avoided.—Chemiker Zeitung, v. 7, p. 703.
DETERMINATION OF NITROGEN IN HAIR, WOOL, DRIED BLOOD, FLESH MEAL, AND LEATHER
70SCRAPS
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
[1]
By A. Peltz.
The method which is here recommended originated with Dr. M. Buchner, and consists in preparing a
concentrated solution of alcoholic caustic potash—one part caustic potash to three of 90 per cent.
alcohol—and then boiling one to two grammes of the suspected wax in a small flask with the above
solution. The liquid is poured into a glass cylinder to prevent solidification of the contents, and it is then
placed for about one half hour in boiling water. With pure wax the solution remains clear white; when
ceresine and paraffine are present, they will float on the surface of the alkali solution as an oily layer, and on
cooling they will appear lighter in color than the saponified mass, and thus they may be quantitatively
estimated. The author likewise gives a superficial method for the determination of the purity of beeswax. It
depends on the formation of wax crystals when the fused wax solidifies. These crystals form on the surface on
cooling, and are still visible after solidification when examining the surface from the side. The test succeeds
best when the liquid wax is poured into a shallow tin mould After cooling another peculiar property of the
wax becomes apparent. While the beeswax fills a smaller volume, that is, separates from the sides of the
mould, the Japanese wax, without separating from the sides, becomes covered with cracks on cooling which
have a depth corresponding to the thickness of the wax.—Neuste Erfindungen und Erfahrungen, viii.,
p. 430.
By Prof. E. Reichard.
The manager of a well directed brewery, which was built according to the latest improvements and provided
with ice-cooling arrangements, found that the alcoholic fermentation of lager beer did not advance with proper
regularity. The beer did not clarify well, it remained turbid and had a tendency to assume a disagreeable odor
and taste. Microscopic examination of the yeast, however, showed the same to be bottom yeast. After some
time its action apparently diminished, or rather, the fermentation, which began well, ceased, and at the same
time a white foam formed in the center of the vat. The manager observing this, again submitted it to
microscopic examination. The instrument revealed a number of much smaller forms of fungi, similar to those
of young yeast, and some which were excessively large, a variety never found in bottom yeast. Fully
appreciating the microscopic examination, and aware of the danger which the spread of the fungi could cause,
the manager resorted to all known means to retard its pernicious influence. Fresh yeast was employed, and the
fermenting vats throughly cleaned, both inside and out, but the phenomena reappeared, showing that the
transmission took place through the air. A microscopic examination of a gelatinous coating on the wall of the
fermenting room further explained the matter. Beginning at the door of the ice cellar, the walls were covered
with a gelatinous mass, which, even when placed beneath the microscope, showed no definite organic
structure; however it contained numerous threads of fungi. Notwithstanding the precautions which were taken
for cleanliness, these germs traveled from the ceiling through the air into the fermenting liquid and there
produced a change, which would ultimately have caused the destruction of all the beer.
For a third time and by altogether different means, it was demonstrated that the air was the bearer of these
germs. The whole atmosphere was infected, and a simple change of air was by no manner of means sufficient,
By Dr. C. Krauch. 71
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
as has already been shown. In addition, these observations throw considerable light on the means by which
contagious diseases are spread, for often a room, a house, or the entire neighborhood appears to be infected. It
must also be remembered how, in times of plague, large fires were resorted as to a method of purifying the air.
With the infinite distribution of germs, and as they are always present in all places where any organic portions
of vegetable or animal matter are undergoing decomposition, it becomes, under certain circumstances,
exceedingly difficult, and at times even impossible, to trace the direct effect of these minute germs. The
organism is exposed to the destructive action of the most minute creation; several changes in this case give to
them the direct effect of the acting germs. The investigation of the chemist does not extend beyond the
chemical changes; nevertheless these phenomena are directly explained by the microscope, without which, in
the present case, the discovery of the cause would have remained unknown.—Arch. der Pharm., 214,
158.
The addition of six or eight drops of glycerine entirely removes the color, and if any glycerine was present in
the liquid the reaction does not take place at all. By this test the presence of 1 per cent. of glycerine can be
detected. It may be applied to the analysis of wines, beers, etc., but when there is much sugar, extractive or
coloring matter, the test can only be applied after evaporating, dissolving the residue in alcohol and ether,
evaporating again, and then redissolving in water. Alkaline solutions must be first acidulated.—Pharm.
Zeit. für Russ.
LYCOPODINE.
While the phanerogams or flowering plants annually contribute to the list of newly discovered alkaloids, with
the exception of muscarine and amanitine, no alkaloid has as yet been definitely recognized among the
cryptogams.
Karl Bödeker, of Göttingen, has opened the road in this direction, and gives in a paper sent to Liebig's
Annalen der Chemie, August 15, 1881, the following account of an alkaloid, which, from the name of the
plant in which it occurs, he calls lycopodine.
The plant yielding the alkaloid, Lycopodium complanatum, belongs to the group of angiospermous
cryptogams. It is distributed throughout the whole of north and middle Europe, and contains the largest
proportion of aluminum of any known plant. Its bitter taste led the author to suspect an alkaloid in it.
To prepare the alkaloid the dried plant is chopped up and twice exhausted with boiling alcohol of 90 per cent.
The residue is squeezed out while hot, and the extract, after being allowed to settle awhile, is decanted off,
and evaporated to a viscid consistency over a water bath. This is then repeatedly kneaded up with fresh
quantities of lukewarm water until the washings cease to taste bitter, and to give a reddish brown coloration
when treated with a strong aqueous solution of iodine. The several washings are collected and precipitated
with basic lead acetate, the precipitate filtered off, and the lead in the filtrate removed by sulphureted
hydrogen. The filtrate from the lead sulphide is evaporated down over a water bath, then made strongly
alkaline with a solution of caustic soda, and repeatedly shaken up with fresh quantities of ether so long as the
washings taste bitter and give a precipitate with iodine water. After distilling off the ether, the residue is
treated with strong hydrochloric acid, the neutral or slightly acid solution filtered off from resinous particles,
slowly evaporated to crystallization, and the crystals purified by repeated recrystallization. To prepare the
By Prof. E. Reichard. 72
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
pure base a very concentrated solution of this pure hydrochlorate is treated with an excess of a very
concentrated solution of caustic soda, and pieces of caustic potash are added, whereupon the free alkaloid
separates out at first as a colorless resinous stringy mass, which, however, upon standing, turns crystalline,
forming monoclinic crystals similar to tartaric acid or glycocol. The crystals are rapidly washed with water,
and dried between soft blotting paper.
Thus prepared, lycopodine has a composition which may be represented by the formula C32H52N2O3. It melts
at 114° to 115° C. without loss of weight. It is tolerable soluble in water and in ether, and very soluble indeed
in alcohol, chloroform, benzol, or amyl alcohol. Lycopodine has a very pure bitter taste.
The author has formed several salts of the base, all of a crystalline nature, and containing water of
crystallization.
The hydrochlorate gives up a part of its water of crystallization at the ordinary temperature under a desiccator
over sulphuric acid, and the whole of it upon heating.—Chemist and Druggist.
CONCHINAMINE.
Some years ago, O. Hesse, when preparing chinamine from the renewed bark of Cinchona succirubra, found
in the mother liquid a new alkaloid, which he then briefly designated as conchinamine. He has lately given his
attention to the separation and preparation of this alkaloid, and gives in Liebig's Annalen der Chemie, August
31, 1881, the following description of it:
Preparation.—The alcoholic mother lye from chinamine is evaporated down and protractedly
exhausted with boiling ligroine, whereby conchinamine and a small quantity of certain amorphous bases are
dissolved out. Upon cooling the greater part of the amorphous bases precipitates out. The ligroine solution is
then first treated with dilute acetic acid, and then with a dilute solution of caustic soda, whereupon a large
quantity of a resinous precipitate is formed. This is kneaded up with lukewarm water to remove adherent soda,
and then dissolved in hot alcohol. The alcoholic solution is saturated with nitric acid, which has been
previously diluted with half its volume of water, and the whole set aside for a few days to crystallize. The
crystals of conchinamine nitrate are purified by recrystallization from boiling water. On dissolving these pure
crystals of the nitrate in hot alcohol of 60 per cent., and adding ammonia, absolute pure conchinamine
separates out on cooling.
Properties.—Conchinamine is easily soluble in hot alcohol of 60 per cent., and in ether and ligroine,
from which solutions it crystallizes in quadrilateral shining prisms. It is extremely soluble in chloroform, but
almost insoluble in water. It melts at 121° C., forming crystalline stars on cooling.
Salts.—The salts of conchinamine, like the base itself, have much in common with chinamine, but are,
as a rule, more easily crystallizable. They are prepared by neutralizing an alcoholic solution of the base with
the acid in question.—Chemist and Druggist.
LYCOPODINE. 73
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
CHINOLINE.
The valuable properties of which chinoline has been found to be possessed have led to its admission as a
therapeutic agent, and the discoverer of these properties, Jul. Donath, of Baja, in Hungary, in a paper sent to
the Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft, September 12, 1881, gives the following further details
as to this interesting substance.
Antiseptic Properties.—Chinoline appears to be an excellent antiseptic. The author found that 100
grammes of a Bucholze's solution for the propagation of bacteria, charged with 0.20 g. of chinoline
hydrochlorate, had remained perfectly clear and free from bacteria after standing forty-six days exposed to the
air, while a similar solution, placed under the same conditions, without chinoline, had turned muddy and
contained bacteria after only twelve days' standing.
Antizymotic Properties.—Chinoline, even in the proportion of 5 per cent., does not prevent alcoholic
fermentation, while in as small a quantity as 0.20 per cent. it does not prevent lactic acid fermentation.
Physiological Effects.—The author gave a healthy man during several days various doses of chinoline
tartrate, which in no way affected the individual operated on, nor was any trace of chinoline found in his
urine. The author, therefore, considers that the base is oxidized by the blood to carbopyridinic acid, which is a
still more powerful antiseptic than chinoline itself. Chinoline taken internally would, therefore, be a useful and
safe agent in cases of internal putrid fungoid or other growth.
PREPARATION OF CONIINE.
Dr. J. Schorm, of Vienna, the author of this paper, after remarking that in spite of the increase of the
consumption of coniine, the methods hitherto in vogue for preparing it yielded an article which darkened on
exposure to the air, and the salts of which crystallized but badly, gives the following method for preparing
pure coniine and its salts:
A.—100 kilogrammes of hemlock seed are moistened with hot water, and after swelling up are treated
with 4 kilogrammes of sodium carbonate previously dissolved in the requisite quantity of water (caustic
alkalies cannot be used). The swollen seed is worked up uniformly with shovels, and then placed in an
apparatus of 400 kilogrammes capacity, similar to that used in the distillation of ethereal oils, and charged
with steam under a pressure of three atmospheres. Coniine distills over with the steam, the greater part
separating out in the receiver as an oily stratum, while a part remains dissolved in the water. The riper the
seeds, the greater is the percentage yield of oily coniine, and the sooner is the distillation ended. The distillate
is neutralized with hydrochloric acid, and the whole evaporated to a weak sirupy consistence. When cool, this
sirup yields successive crops of sal-ammoniac crystals, which latter are removed by shaking up the mass with
twice its volume of strong alcohol, and filtering. This filtrate is freed from alcohol by evaporation over a water
bath, the approximate quantity of a solution of caustic soda then added, and the whole shaken up with ether.
The ethereal solution is then cooled down to a low temperature, whereby it is separated from conhydrine,
which, being somewhat difficultly soluble in ether, crystallizes out.
B.—The bruised hemlock seed is treated in a vacuum extractor with water acidulated with acetic acid,
CHINOLINE. 74
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
and the extract evaporated in vacuo to a sirupy consistence. The sirup is treated with magnesia, and the
coniine dissolved out by shaking up with ether.
The B method yields a less percentage of coniine than A, but of a better quality.
The solution of crude coniine in ether obtained by either of the above processes is evaporated over a water
bath to remove the ether, mixed with dry potassium carbonate, and then submitted to fractional distillation
from an air bath. The portion distilling over at 168° C. to 169° C. is pure coniine, and represents 60 per cent.
of the crude coniine.
Coniine thus prepared is a colorless oily liquid, volatile at the ordinary temperature, and has a specific gravity
of 0.886. At a temperature of 25°C it absorbs water, which it gives up again upon heating. It is soluble in 90
parts of water. It is not altered by light.
The author has formed a number of salts from coniine thus prepared, and finds them all crystallizable and
unaffected by light.—Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft.—Chem. and Druggist.
STRONTIANITE.
Since it has been shown by Professor Scheibler, of Berlin, that strontium is the most powerful medium of
extraction in sugar refining, owing to its capacity of combining with three parts of saccharate, the idea
suggests itself that the same medium might be successfully employed in the arts, and form a most interesting
subject of experiment for the chemist.
Hitherto native strontianite, that is, the 90 to 95 per cent. pure carbonate of strontium (not the celestine which
frequently is mistaken by the term strontianite), has not been worked systematically in mines, but what used to
be brought to the market was an inferior stone collected in various parts of Germany, chiefly in Westphalia,
where it is found on the surface of the fields. Little also has been collected in this manner, and necessarily the
quality was subject to the greatest fluctuations.
By Dr. Scheibler's important discovery, a new era has begun in the matter of strontianite. Deposits of
considerable importance have been opened in the Westphalian districts at a very great depth, and the supply of
several 10,000 tons per annum seems to be secured, whereas only a short time ago it was not thought possible
that more than a few hundred tons could in all be provided.—Chemist and Druggist.
A disease of a somewhat similar, but severer type, has for many years prevailed in Ceylon. Even less was
known of this affection than of its supposed congener, until a recent careful report upon the subject by Mr.
W.R. Kinsey, principal civil medical officer of Ceylon.
The disease in question is called "parangi," and is defined by Mr. Kinsey (British Medical Journal) as a
specific disease, produced by such causes as lead to debilitation of the system; propagated by contagion,
generally through an abrasion or sore, but sometimes by simple contact with a sound surface; marked by an
ill-defined period of incubation, followed by certain premonitory symptoms referable to the general system,
then by the evolution of successive crops of a characteristic eruption, which pass on in weakly subjects into
unhealthy and spreading ulcers whose cicatrices are very prone to contraction; running a definite course;
attacking all ages, and amenable to appropriate treatment.
The disease seems to develop especially in places where the water supply, which in Ceylon is kept in tanks, is
insufficient or poor. The bad food, dirty habits, and generally unhygienic mode of life of the people, help on
the action of the disease.
Parangi, when once developed, spreads generally by contagion from the discharges of the eruptions and
ulcers. The natural secretions do not convey the poison. The disease may be inherited also.
In the clinical history of the disease there are, according to Mr. Kinsey, four stages. The first is that of
incubation. It lasts from two weeks to two months. A sore will be found somewhere upon the body at this
time, generally over some bony prominence. The second is the stage of invasion, and is characterized by the
development of slight fever, malaise, dull pains in the joints. As this stage comes on the initial sore heals. This
second stage lasts only from two to seven days, and ends with an eruption which ushers in the third stage. The
eruption appears in successive crops, the first often showing itself on the face, the next on the body, and the
last on the extremities. This eruptive stage of the disease continues for several weeks or months, and it ends
either in convalescence or the onset of a train of sequelæ, which may prolong the disease for years.
Parangi may attack any one, though the poorly fed and housed are more susceptible. One attack seems to
confer immunity from another.
Although some of the sequelæ of the disease are most painful, yet death does not often directly result from
them, nor is parangi itself a fatal disease. Persons who have had parangi and passed safely through it, are not
left in impaired health at all, but often live to an old age.
The similarity of the disease, in its clinical history, to syphilis, is striking. Mr. Kinsey, however, considers it,
as we have stated, allied to, if not identical with frambœsia.—Medical Record.
To take the boiled pudding out of the cloth without breaking it, dip it into cold water for a minute or two, then
place it in a round bottomed basin that will just hold it, untie the cloth and lay bare the pudding down to the
edge of the basin; then place upon it, upside down, the dish on which it is to be served, and invert the whole
so that the pudding may rest on the dish; lastly, lift off the basin and remove the cloth. The use of the cold
water is to chill and solidify the surface, so that it may part from the cloth smoothly.
Plum pudding may also be baked in a mould or pan, which must be well buttered inside before pouring the
pudding into it. Two hours' boiling suffices.
PLUM-PUDDING SAUCE.
Put into a saucepan two ounces of best butter and a tablespoonful of flour; mix these well together with a
wooden spoon, and stir in half a pint of cold water and a little salt and pepper. Set this on the fire and stir
constantly till nearly boiling; then add half a tumbler of Madeira wine, brandy, or Jamaica rum, fine sugar to
the taste, and a little ground cinnamon or grated nutmeg. Make the sauce very hot, and serve over each portion
of the pudding.
EGG FLIP.
Beat up in a bowl half a dozen fresh eggs; add half a pound of pulverized sugar; stir well together, and pour in
one quart or more of boiling water, about half a pint at a time, mixing well as you pour it in; when all is in,
add two tumblers of best brandy and one of Jamaica rum.
ROAST TURKEY.
The turkey is without doubt the most savory and finest flavored of all our domestic fowls, and is justly held in
the highest estimation by the good livers in all countries where it is known. Singe, draw, and truss the turkey
in the same manner as other fowls; then fill with a stuffing made of bread crumbs, butter, sweet herbs rubbed
fine, moistened with eggs and seasoned with pepper, salt, and grated nutmeg. Sausage meat or a forced meat,
made of boiled chicken meat, boiled ham grated fine, chopped oysters, roasted or boiled chestnuts rubbed
fine, stewed mushrooms, or last but not the least in estimation, a dozen fine truffles cut into pieces and sauted
in the best of butter, and added part to the stuffing and part to the sauce which is made from the drippings
(made into a good brown gravy by the addition of a capful of cold water thickened with a little flour, with the
giblets boiled and chopped fine in it). A turkey of ten pounds will require two and a half hours' roasting and
frequent basting. Currant jelly, cranberry jelly, or cranberry sauce should always be on the table with roast
turkey.
PLUM-PUDDING SAUCE. 78
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
CANVAS-BACK DUCKS.
Select young fat ducks; pick them nicely, singe, and draw them carefully without washing them so as to
preserve the blood and consequently the full flavor of the bird; then truss it and place it on the spit before a
brisk fire, or in a pan in a hot oven for at least fifteen or twenty minutes; then serve it hot with its own gravy,
which is formed by its own blood and juices, on a hot dish. It may also be a little less cooked, and then carved
and placed on a chafing dish with red currant jelly, port wine, and a little butter.
PHEASANTS.
A pheasant should have a clear, steady fire, but not a fierce one. The pheasant, being a rather dry bird,
requires to be larded, or put a piece of beef or a rump steak into the inside of it before roasting.
WILD DUCKS.
In order to serve these birds in their most succulent state and finest flavor, let them hang in their feathers for a
few days after being shot; then pluck, clean, and draw, and roast them in a quick oven or before a brisk fire;
dredge and baste them well, and allow them twenty minutes to roast; serve them with gravy sauce and red
currant jelly, or with a gravy sauce to which a chopped shallot and the juice of an orange has been added.
ORANGE PUDDING.
Beat up the yolks of eight eggs, grate the yellow rinds from two oranges, add these to a quarter of a pound of
finely powdered sugar, the same weight of fresh butter, three teaspoonfuls of orange-flower water, two glasses
of sherry wine, two or three stale Naples biscuits or lady fingers, and a teacupful of cream. Line a dish with
puff paste, pour in the ingredients, and bake for half an hour in a good oven.
VENISON PASTRY.
A neck or breast of venison is rendered very savory by treating it as follows: Take off the skin and cut the
meat off the bones into pieces of about an inch square; put these, with the bones, into a stewpan, cover them
with veal or mutton broth, add two thirds of a teaspoon of powdered mace, half a dozen allspice, three shallots
chopped fine, a teaspoonful of salt, a saltspoon of Cayenne, and a tumbler of port wine; stew over a slow fire
until the meat is half done, then take it out and let the gravy remain on the fire ten or fifteen minutes longer.
Line a good sized dish with pastry, arrange your meat on it, pour the gravy upon it through a sieve, adding the
juice of a lemon; put on the top crust, and bake for a couple of hours in a slow oven.
SUGARED PEARS.
Half a dozen of those fine pears called the "Bartlett" will make a small dish worthy the attention of any good
Christian who has a sweet tooth in his head. Pare the fruit, cut out the cores, squeeze lemon juice over them,
which will prevent their discoloration. Boil them gently in enough sirup to cover them till they become tender.
Serve them cold, with Naples biscuit round the dish.
ORANGE PUDDING. 80
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
TABLE BEER.
Table beer of a superior quality may be brewed in the following manner, a process well worth the attention of
the gentleman, the mechanic, and the farmer, whereby the beer is altogether prevented from working out of
the cask, and the fermentation conducted without any apparent admission of the external air. I have made the
scale for one barrel, in order to make it more generally useful to the community at large; however the same
proportions will answer for a greater or less quantity, only proportioning the materials and utensils. Take one
peck of good malt, ground, one pound of hops, put them in twenty gallons of water, and boil them for half an
hour; then run them into a hair-cloth bag or sieve, so as to keep back the hops and malt from the wort, which
when cooled down to sixty-five degrees by Fahrenheit's thermometer, add to it two gallons of molasses, with
one pint, or a little less, of good yeast. Mix these with your wort, and put the whole into a clean barrel, and fill
it up with cold water to within six inches of the bung hole (this space is requisite to leave room for
fermentation), bung down tight. If brewed for family use, would recommend putting in the cock at the same
time, as it will prevent the necessity of disturbing the cask afterward. In one fortnight this beer may be drawn
and will be found to improve to the last.
MINCE MEAT.
This inevitable Christmas luxury is vastly improved by being mixed some days before it is required for use;
this gives the various ingredients time to amalgamate and blend.
Peel, core, and chop fine a pound of pippin apples, wash and clean a pound of Zante currants, stone one pound
of bloom raisins, cut into small pieces a pound of citron, remove the skin and gristle from a pound and a half
of cold roast or boiled beef, and carefully pick a pound of beef suet; chop these well together. Cut into small
bits three-quarters of a pound of mixed candied orange and lemon peel; mix all these ingredients well together
in a large earthen pan. Grate one nutmeg, half an ounce of powdered ginger, quarter of an ounce of ground
cloves, quarter of an ounce of ground allspice and coriander seed mixed, and half an ounce of salt. Grate the
yellow rind of three lemons, and squeeze the juice over two pounds of fine sugar. Put the grated yellow rind
and all the other ingredients in a pan; mix well together, and over all pour one pint of brandy, one pint of
sherry, and one pint of hard cider; stir well together, cover the pan closely, and when about to use the mince
meat, take it from the bottom of the pan.
PUMPKIN PIE.
"What moistens the lip, and what brightens the eye?
What calls back the past like the rich pumpkin pie?"
Stew about two pounds of pumpkins, then add to it three-quarters of a pound of sugar, and the same quantity
of butter, well worked together; stir these into the pumpkin and add a teaspoonful of powdered mace and
grated nutmeg, and a little ground cinnamon; then add a gill of brandy, beat them well together, and stir in the
yolks of eight well-beaten eggs. Line the pie plates with puff paste, fill them with the pumpkin mixture, grate
a little nutmeg over the top, and bake.
BRANDY PUNCH.
Take three dozen lemons, chip off the yellow rinds, taking care that none of the white underlying pith is taken,
as that would make the punch bitter, whereas the yellow portion of the rinds is that in which the flavor resides
and in which the cells are placed containing the essential oil. Put this yellow rind into a punch bowl, add to it
two pounds of lump sugar; stir the sugar and peel together with a wooden spoon or spatula for nearly half an
TABLE BEER. 81
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
hour, thereby extracting a greater quantity of the essential oil. Now add boiling water, and stir until the sugar
is completely dissolved. Squeeze and strain the juice from the lemons and add it to the mixture; stir together
and taste it; add more acid or more sugar, as required, and take care not to render it too watery. "Rich of the
fruit and plenty of sweetness," is the maxim. Now measure the sherbet, and to every three quarts add a pint of
cognac brandy and a pint of old Jamaica rum, the spirit being well stirred as poured in. This punch may be
bottled and kept in a cool cellar; it will be found to improve with age.
PUNCH JELLY.
Make a bowl of punch according to the directions for brandy punch, only a little stronger. To every pint of
punch add an ounce of gelatine dissolved in half a pint of water; pour this into the punch while quite hot, and
then fill your moulds, taking care not to disturb it until the jelly is completely set. This preparation is a very
agreeable refreshment, but should be used in moderation. The strength of the punch is so artfully concealed by
its admixture with the gelatine that many persons, particularly of the softer sex, have been tempted to partake
so plentifully of it as to render them somewhat unfit for waltzing or quadrilling after supper.
ORANGE SALAD.
This somewhat inappropriately-named dish is made by removing the rind and cutting the fruit in slices
crosswise and adding equal quantities of brandy and Madeira, in proportion to the quantity of fruit thus
dressed, strewing a liberal allowance of finely-powdered sugar over all.
CRANBERRY JELLY.
Put two quarts of cranberries into a large earthen pipkin, and cover them with water; place them on a moderate
fire, and boil them until they are reduced to a soft pulp; then strain and press them through a hair sieve into an
earthen or stone ware pan, and for each pint of liquid pulp allow one pound of pulverized sugar; mix the pulp
and sugar together in a bright copper basin and boil, stirring constantly for ten or fifteen minutes, or until the
mixture begins to coagulate upon the spatula; then remove it from the fire and fill your moulds; let them stand
in a cool place to set. When wanted for use, turn it out of the mould in the same manner as other jellies.
JOVE'S NECTAR.
For three gallons, peel the yellow rind from one and a half dozen fresh lemons, very thin, and steep the
peelings for forty-eight hours in a gallon of brandy; then add the juice of the lemons, with five quarts of water,
three pounds of loaf sugar, and two nutmegs grated; stir it till the sugar is completely dissolved, then pour in
BRANDY PUNCH. 82
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
three quarts of new milk, boiling hot, and let it stand two hours, after which run it through a jelly bag till it is
fine. This is fit for immediate use, but may be kept for years in bottles, and will be improved by age.
Take one and a half pounds of the best butter, and the same weight of pulverized sugar; beat them together to
a cream; stir into this two dozen eggs, beaten to a froth; add one gill of old Jamaica rum; then add one and a
half pounds of sifted flour. Stir and beat all well together, and add two pounds of finest bloom raisins, stoned;
two pounds of Zante currants, washed, cleaned, and dried; one pound of preserved citron, sliced thinly and cut
into small pieces; one pound of preserved French cherries, in halves; one pound of green gages, and one
pound of preserved apricots, stoned and cut into small pieces; half a pound of preserved orange and lemon
peel, mixed, and cut into small pieces; three grated nutmegs, half an ounce of ground mace, half an ounce of
powdered cinnamon, and a quarter ounce of ground cloves. Mix all the ingredients well together, and bake in
a well-buttered mould or pan, in a slow oven, for five and a half hours.
This cake is vastly improved by age. Those intended for the Christmas festivities should be made at or about
the first of October; then put the cake into a round tin box, half an inch larger in diameter than the cake; then
pour over it a bottle of the best brandy mixed with half a pint of pure lemon, raspberry, strawberry, or simple
sirup, and one or more bottles of champagne. Now put on the lid of the box, and have it carefully soldered on,
so as to make all perfectly air-tight. Put it away in your store-room, and let stand till Christmas, only reversing
the box occasionally, in order that the liquors may permeate the cake thoroughly.
This heroic treatment causes the ingredients to amalgamate, and the flavors to harmonize and blend more
freely; and when, on Christmas day, you bring out this hermit, after doing a three months' penance in a dark
cell, it will come out rich, succulent, and unctuous; you will not only have a luxury, "fit to set before a king,"
or before the Empress of India, but fit to crown a feast of the very gods themselves, on high Olympus' top.
JOVE'S NECTAR. 83
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Cold boiled ham grated fine, or boiled beef tongue chopped very fine, may be used instead of chicken,
omitting the salt. A dozen or two of prime oysters, parboiled, drained, and chopped fine, mixed with the
potatoes prepared as above, and fried, makes a most delicious lunch or supper dish. Try any of the above
styles, and say no, if you can.
A catalogue, containing brief notices of many important scientific papers heretofore published in the
Supplement, may be had gratis at this office.
THE
PUBLISHED WEEKLY.
Terms of Subscription, $5 a Year.
Sent by mail, postage prepaid, to subscribers in any part of the United States or Canada. Six dollars a year,
sent, prepaid, to any foreign country.
All the back numbers of The Supplement, from the commencement, January 1, 1876, can be had. Price, 10
cents each.
All the back volumes of The Supplement can likewise be supplied. Two volumes are issued yearly. Price of
each volume, $2.50, stitched in paper, or $3.50, bound in stiff covers.
Combined Rates.—One copy of Scientific American and one copy of Scientific American Supplement,
one year, postpaid, $7.00.
PATENTS.
In connection with the Scientific American, Messrs. Munn & Co. are Solicitors of American and Foreign
Patents, have had 35 years' experience, and now have the largest establishment in the world. Patents are
obtained on the best terms.
A special notice is made in the Scientific American of all Inventions patented through this Agency, with the
name and residence of the Patentee. By the immense circulation thus given, public attention is directed to the
merits of the new patent, and sales or introduction often easily effected.
Any person who has made a new discovery or invention can ascertain, free of charge, whether a patent can
probably be obtained, by writing to Munn & Co.
We also send free our Hand Book about the Patent Laws, Patents, Caveats, Trade Marks, their costs, and how
procured, with hints for procuring advances on inventions. Address
THE 85
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.
PATENTS. 86
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
States.
1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
PATENTS. 87
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
copied or distributed:
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
PATENTS. 88
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License. You must require such a user to return or
destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
Project Gutenberg-tm works.
- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
1.F.
PATENTS. 89
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
your equipment.
1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
PATENTS. 90
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
PATENTS. 91
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation
Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
PATENTS. 92
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scientific American Supplement, January 14, 1882
http://www.gutenberg.org
PATENTS. 93